Growth Hormone-Releasing Hormone Receptor Antagonist Modulates Lung Inflammation and Fibrosis due to Bleomycin.
Zhang. Chongxu C; Cai. Renzhi R; Lazerson. Aaron A; Delcroix. Gaetan G; Wangpaichitr. Medhi M; Mirsaeidi. Mehdi M; Griswold. Anthony J AJ; Schally. Andrew V AV; Jackson. Robert M RM
Key Findings
- A GHRH‑receptor antagonist (MIA‑602) lowered lung inflammation after 14 days in bleomycin‑treated mice.
- The antagonist prevented the rise in lung collagen (hydroxyproline) that signals fibrosis after 28 days.
- MIA‑602 altered gene expression, suppressing immune‑cell activation pathways while boosting some metabolic genes in lung fibroblasts.
Practical Outcomes
- For the biohacker community, this study offers little direct, actionable guidance because it uses a GHRH antagonist—not sermorelin, a GHRH agonist commonly explored for GH boosting. The findings are limited to a specific mouse lung injury model and do not translate into a protocol for human longevity, metabolic health, or performance enhancement.
Summary
In mice, blocking the receptor for growth‑hormone‑releasing hormone (using a compound called MIA‑602) reduced lung inflammation and scarring caused by the drug bleomycin. The treatment also changed the activity of many immune‑related genes in the lungs.
Abstract
Growth hormone-releasing hormone (GHRH) is a 44-amino acid peptide that regulates growth hormone (GH) secretion. We hypothesized that a GHRH receptor (GHRH-R) antagonist, MIA-602, would inhibit bleomycin-induced lung inflammation and/or fibrosis in C57Bl/6J mice. We tested whether MIA-602 (5 μg or vehicle given subcutaneously [SC] on days 1-21) would decrease lung inflammation (at day 14) and/or fibrosis (at day 28) in mice treated with intraperitoneal (IP) bleomycin (0.8 units on days 1, 3, 7, 10, 14, and 21). Bleomycin resulted in inflammation and fibrosis around airways and vessels evident histologically at days 14 and 28. Inflammation (histopathologic scores assessed blindly) was visibly less evident in mice treated with MIA-602 for 14 days. After 28 days, lung hydroxyproline (HP) content increased significantly in mice treated with vehicle; in contrast, lung HP did not increase significantly compared to naïve controls in mice treated with GHRH-R antagonist. GHRH-R antagonist increased basal and maximal oxygen consumption of cultured lung fibroblasts. Multiple genes related to chemotaxis, IL-1, chemokines, regulation of inflammation, and extracellular signal-regulated kinases (ERK) were upregulated in lungs of mice treated with bleomycin and MIA-602. MIA-602 also prominently suppressed multiple genes related to the cellular immune response including those for T-cell differentiation, receptor signaling, activation, and cytokine production. MIA-602 reduced lung inflammation and fibrosis due to bleomycin. Multiple genes related to immune response and T-cell functions were downregulated, supporting the view that MIA-602 can modulate the cellular immune response to bleomycin lung injury.
Study Information
pubmed
2019
2019-08-07T00:00:00.000Z
10.1007/s00408-019-00257-w
42
44