Growth hormone-releasing hormone antagonists abolish the transactivation of human epidermal growth factor receptors in advanced prostate cancer models.
Muñoz-Moreno. Laura L; Arenas. M Isabel MI; Carmena. M José MJ; Schally. Andrew V AV; Prieto. Juan C JC; Bajo. Ana M AM
Key Findings
- GHRH increases the levels and activity of EGFR and HER2 in prostate cancer cells.
- GHRH antagonists (JMR‑132 and JV‑1‑38) stop this activation and reduce tumor growth in mouse models.
- The signaling involves cAMP/PKA, Src, and ADAM pathways, and antagonists lower phosphorylated Src levels.
Practical Outcomes
- For biohackers, this suggests that GHRH pathways interact with important growth factor signals, so chronic use of GHRH agonists like sermorelin could have complex effects beyond GH release. The antagonists shown are experimental cancer drugs, not ready for self‑experimentation, and no dosing guidance for health optimization is provided.
Summary
The study found that blocking the hormone that normally triggers growth hormone release (GHRH) can also shut down cancer‑related growth signals (EGFR/HER2) in prostate cancer cells and tumors in mice. However, the work used experimental GHRH‑blocking compounds, not the commonly used sermorelin, and it was done in a cancer model, so it doesn’t give direct, safe ways to use sermorelin for health or performance.
Abstract
Growth hormone-releasing hormone (GHRH) and its receptors have been implicated in a variety of cellular phenotypes related with tumorigenesis process. Human epidermal growth factor receptor family members (HER) such as EGFR and HER2 are involved in mitogenic signaling pathways implicated in the progression of prostate cancer. We analyzed the cross-talk between GHRH and EGF receptors in prostate cancer. The effects of GHRH in HER signaling were evaluated on human androgen-independent PC3 prostate cancer cells in vitro and GHRH antagonist in vitro and in nude mice xenografts of PC3 prostate cancer. Time-course studies indicated that GHRH had a stimulatory activity on both the expression of EGFR and HER2. GHRH analogues, JMR-132 and JV-1-38, endowed with antagonistic activity for GHRH receptors, abrogated the response to GHRH in PC3 cells. GHRH stimulated a rapid ligand-independent activation of EGFR and HER2 involving at least cAMP/PKA and Src family signaling pathways. GHRH also stimulated a slow ligand-dependent activation of EGFR and HER2 involving an extracellular pathway with an important role for ADAM. Preliminary results also revealed an increase of mRNA for GHRH and GHRH receptor induced by EGF. The inhibition of tumor growth, in vivo, was associated with a substantial reduction in the expression of mRNA and protein levels of EGFR and HER2 in the tumors. GHRH antagonist JV-1-38, significantly decreased the phosphorylated Src levels. The cross-talk between HER and GHRH-R may be impeded by combining drugs acting upon GHRH receptors and HER family members in human advanced prostate cancer.
Study Information
pubmed
2014
2014-07-08T00:00:00.000Z
10.1007/s10637-014-0131-4
17
54