Antagonists of growth hormone-releasing hormone (GH-RH) inhibit IGF-II production and growth of HT-29 human colon cancers.
Szepeshazi. K K; Schally. A V AV; Groot. K K; Armatis. P P; Halmos. G G; Herbert. F F; Szende. B B; Varga. J L JL; Zarandi. M M
Key Findings
- GH‑RH antagonists reduced tumor size by 43‑58% in mice
- They lowered IGF‑II levels and mRNA in the tumors
- Tumor inhibition was linked to less cell division and more cell death
Practical Outcomes
- The results are specific to cancer treatment in a mouse model and involve GH‑RH blockers, not the sermorelin peptide that biohackers might use. There’s no actionable protocol for longevity or performance, and the study does not support using sermorelin for any health benefit.
Summary
In mice with human colon cancer, drugs that block growth‑hormone‑releasing hormone (GH‑RH) slowed tumor growth by cutting the cancer cells’ production of IGF‑II, but these drugs are not the same as sermorelin and the study doesn’t give any usable advice for everyday health or performance.
Abstract
Insulin-like growth factors (IGFs) I and II are implicated in progression of various tumours including colorectal carcinomas. To interfere with the production of IGFs, we treated male nude mice bearing xenografts of HT-29 human colon cancer with various potent growth hormone-releasing hormone (GH-RH) antagonists. Twice daily injections of antagonist MZ-4-71, 10 microg intraperitoneally or 5 microg subcutaneously (s.c.) resulted in a significant 43-45% inhibition of tumour growth. Longer acting GH-RH antagonists, MZ-5-156 and JV-1-36 given once daily at doses of 20 microg s.c. produced a 43-58% decrease in volume and weight of cancers. Histological analyses of HT-29 cancers demonstrated that both a decreased cell proliferation and an increased apoptosis contributed to tumour inhibition. GH-RH antagonists did not change serum IGF-I or IGF-II levels, but significantly decreased IGF-II concentration and reduced mRNA expression for IGF-II in tumours. In vitro studies showed that HT-29 cells produced and secreted IGF-II into the medium, and addition of MZ-5-156 dose-dependently decreased IGF-II production by about 40% as well as proliferation of HT-29 cells. Our studies demonstrate that GH-RH antagonists inhibit growth of HT-29 human colon cancers in vivo and in vitro. The effect of GH-RH antagonists may be mediated through a reduced production and secretion of IGF-II by cancer cells.
Study Information
pubmed
2000
2000-04-27T00:00:00.000Z
10.1054/bjoc.2000.1223
76
45