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Sermorelin

GHRH (1-29), GRF 1-29 NH2, Sermorelin acetate

Quick Stats
Studies 223
Trials 41
Score 1
2017 pubmed 12 citations

Growth hormone-releasing hormone antagonist inhibits the invasiveness of human endometrial cancer cells by down-regulating twist and N-cadherin expression.

Wu. Hsien-Ming HM; Huang. Hong-Yuan HY; Schally. Andrew V AV; Chao. Angel A; Chou. Hung-Hsueh HH; Leung. Peter C K PC; Wang. Hsin-Shih HS

Key Findings

  • GHRH antagonist reduces invasion and migration of endometrial cancer cells in a dose‑dependent way
  • The drug lowers levels of Twist and N‑cadherin, proteins linked to cell motility
  • Knocking down the GHRH receptor or Twist/N‑cadherin reverses the anti‑migration effect

Practical Outcomes

  • The findings are early‑stage and limited to cancer cell experiments, so they don’t translate into any usable protocol for longevity, metabolism, or performance. No dosage, safety, or human data are provided, making it largely irrelevant for self‑directed health optimization.

Summary

A lab study found that blocking the hormone‑releasing signal (GHRH) can slow down the movement of endometrial cancer cells by lowering two proteins, Twist and N‑cadherin, that help cells spread. This effect only shows up in cell cultures and depends on the presence of the GHRH receptor.

Abstract

More than 25% of patients diagnosed with endometrial carcinoma have invasive primary cancer accompanied by metastases. Growth hormone-releasing hormone (GHRH) plays an important role in reproduction. Here, we examined the effect of a GHRH antagonist on the motility of endometrial cancer cells and the mechanisms of action of the antagonist in endometrial cancer. Western blotting and immunohistochemistry (IHC) were used to determine the expression of the GHRH receptor protein. The activity of Twist and N-cadherin was determined by Western blotting. Cell motility was assessed by an invasion and migration assay. GHRH receptor siRNA was applied to knockdown the GHRH receptor in endometrial cancer cells. The GHRH antagonist inhibited cell motility in a dose-dependent manner. The GHRH antagonist inhibited cell motility and suppressed the expression of Twist and N-cadherin, and the suppression was abolished by GHRH receptor siRNA pretreatment. Moreover, the inhibition of Twist and N-cadherin with Twist siRNA and N-cadherin siRNA, respectively, suppressed cell motility. Our study indicates that the GHRH antagonist inhibited the cell motility of endometrial cancer cells through the GHRH receptor via the suppression of Twist and N-cadherin. Our findings represent a new concept in the mechanism of GHRH antagonist-suppressed cell motility in endometrial cancer cells and suggest the possibility of exploring GHRH antagonists as potential therapeutics for the treatment of human endometrial cancer.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

2017

Date

2017-01-17T00:00:00.000Z

DOI

10.18632/oncotarget.13877

Citations

12

References

34