Knocking down gene expression for growth hormone-releasing hormone inhibits proliferation of human cancer cell lines.
Barabutis. N N; Schally. A V AV
Key Findings
- Human cancer cell lines (breast, prostate, lung) produce their own GHRH and have a functional GHRH receptor splice variant.
- Silencing the GHRH gene with siRNA reduces proliferation of these cancer cells in vitro.
- Adding back synthetic GHRH (1‑29)NH2 restores cell growth, and GHRH antagonists block proliferation.
Practical Outcomes
- For biohackers using sermorelin or other GHRH analogs, this research flags a potential cancer‑growth risk, especially if undiagnosed tumors are present. It suggests caution and possibly monitoring for cancer markers when using long‑term GHRH‑based protocols. The findings also hint that GHRH antagonists could be explored as anti‑cancer agents, but they are not yet ready for DIY use.
Summary
The study shows that the natural hormone GHRH (the same thing sermorelin mimics) can make certain cancer cells grow faster, while blocking GHRH stops them from multiplying. When the cells' own GHRH production was turned off, they stopped growing, but adding back a lab‑made GHRH peptide made them grow again. This suggests that GHRH acts like a growth‑promoting signal for some tumors.
Abstract
Splice Variant 1 (SV-1) of growth hormone-releasing hormone (GHRH) receptor, found in a wide range of human cancers and established human cancer cell lines, is a functional receptor with ligand-dependent and independent activity. In the present study, we demonstrated by western blots the presence of the SV1 of GHRH receptor and the production of GHRH in MDA-MB-468, MDA-MB-435S and T47D human breast cancer cell lines, LNCaP prostate cancer cell line as well as in NCI H838 non-small cell lung carcinoma. We have also shown that GHRH produced in the conditioned media of these cell lines is biologically active. We then inhibited the intrinsic production of GHRH in these cancer cell lines using si-RNA, specially designed for human GHRH. The knocking down of the GHRH gene expression suppressed the proliferation of T47D, MDA-MB-435S, MDA-MB-468 breast cancer, LNCaP prostate cancer and NCI H838 non-SCLC cell lines in vitro. However, the replacement of the knocked down GHRH expression by exogenous GHRH (1-29)NH(2) re-established the proliferation of the silenced cancer cell lines. Furthermore, the proliferation rate of untransfected cancer cell lines could be stimulated by GHRH (1-29)NH(2) and inhibited by GHRH antagonists MZ-5-156, MZ-4-71 and JMR-132. These results extend previous findings on the critical function of GHRH in tumorigenesis and support the role of GHRH as a tumour growth factor.
Study Information
pubmed
2008
2008-05-27T00:00:00.000Z
10.1038/sj.bjc.6604386
73
23