Menu
Peptide Database
Results
No peptides found
Featured

Use search to browse all 100+ peptides

Sermorelin

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

Quick Stats
Studies 223
Trials 41
Score 1
2014 pubmed 32 citations

Novel GHRH antagonists suppress the growth of human malignant melanoma by restoring nuclear p27 function.

Szalontay. Luca L; Schally. Andrew V AV; Popovics. Petra P; Vidaurre. Irving I; Krishan. Awtar A; Zarandi. Marta M; Cai. Ren-Zhi RZ; Klukovits. Anna A; Block. Norman L NL; Rick. Ferenc G FG

Key Findings

  • MIA‑690 reduced melanoma cell growth in a dish by about 20‑30% at micromolar concentrations.
  • In mice with human melanoma tumors, daily MIA‑690 injections cut tumor size by roughly 70%.
  • Treatment caused the cell‑cycle inhibitor p27 to move into the nucleus, which is linked to slowed cell division.

Practical Outcomes

  • For biohackers, this study does not provide a usable protocol or dosage for humans, and it focuses on antagonists rather than the commonly used GHRH agonist sermorelin. Until human trials are done, the findings are mainly of scientific interest and not directly actionable for longevity or performance goals.

Summary

A lab study tested new compounds that block the hormone that normally tells the body to release growth hormone. In skin cancer cells and mice, one of these blockers (MIA‑690) slowed tumor growth and pushed a cell‑cycle protein (p27) into the cell nucleus, which can halt cell division. The work is still early‑stage and done in animals, not people.

Abstract

Malignant melanoma is the deadliest form of skin cancer; the treatment of advanced and recurrent forms remains a challenge. It has recently been reported that growth hormone-releasing hormone (GHRH) receptor is involved in the pathogenesis of melanoma. Therefore, we investigated the effects of our new GHRH antagonists on a human melanoma cancer cell line. Antiproliferative effects of GHRH antagonists, MIA-602, MIA-606 and MIA-690, on the human melanoma cell line, A-375, were studied in vitro using the MTS assay. The effect of MIA-690 (5 μg/day 28 d) was further evaluated in vivo in nude mice bearing xenografts of A-375. Subcellular localization of p27 was detected with Western blot and immunofluorescent staining. MIA-690 inhibited the proliferation of A-375 cells in a dose-dependent manner (33% at 10 μM, and 19.2% at 5 μM, P < 0 .05 vs. control), and suppressed the growth of xenografted tumors by 70.45% (P < 0.05). Flow cytometric analysis of cell cycle effects following the administration of MIA-690 revealed a decrease in the number of cells in G2/M phase (from 19.7% to 12.9%, P < 0.001). Additionally, Western blot and immunofluorescent studies showed that exposure of A-375 cells to MIA-690 triggered the nuclear accumulation of p27. MIA-690 inhibited tumor growth in vitro and in vivo, and increased the translocation of p27 into the nucleus thus inhibiting progression of the cell cycle. Our findings indicate that patients with malignant melanoma could benefit from treatment regimens, which combine existing chemotherapy agents and novel GHRH-antagonists.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

2014

Date

2014-09-02T00:00:00.000Z

DOI

10.4161/15384101.2015.945879

Citations

32

References

48