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Sermorelin

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

Quick Stats
Studies 223
Trials 41
Score 1
2006 pubmed

Lipopeptide antagonists of growth hormone-releasing hormone with improved antitumor activities.

Zarandi. Marta M; Varga. Jozsef L JL; Schally. Andrew V AV; Horvath. Judit E JE; Toller. Gabor L GL; Kovacs. Magdolna M; Letsch. Markus M; Groot. Kate K; Armatis. Patricia P; Halmos. Gabor G

Key Findings

  • Adding fatty acids (8‑14 carbons) to GHRH antagonists increased their ability to block cancer cell growth in vitro.
  • Some fatty‑acid‑linked peptides bound the pituitary GHRH receptor more tightly and inhibited hormone release better in a rat pituitary test tube system.
  • One fatty‑acid‑linked antagonist reduced prostate tumor size and IGF‑I levels in mice, whereas the older version did not at a higher dose.

Practical Outcomes

  • These findings are still early‑stage and only in animals; they don’t provide a safe or effective protocol for people to use. No human dosing, safety, or regulatory approval exists, so biohackers should not try these compounds for longevity, performance, or cancer prevention at this time.

Summary

Scientists made new versions of a hormone‑blocking peptide by attaching fatty acids, and these modified peptides worked better at stopping cancer cells in lab dishes and slowed tumor growth in mice, but they didn’t show stronger effects on hormone release in living animals and there’s no human data yet.

Abstract

Antagonists of growth hormone-releasing hormone (GHRH) synthesized previously inhibit proliferation of various human cancers, but derivatisation with fatty acids could enhance their clinical efficacy. We synthesized a series of antagonists of GHRH(1-29)NH(2) acylated at the N terminus with monocarboxylic or alpha,omega-dicarboxylic acids containing six to sixteen carbon atoms. These peptides are analogs of prior potent antagonists JV-1-36, JV-1-38, and JV-1-65 with phenylacetyl group at their N terminus. Several new analogs, including MZ-J-7-46 and MZ-J-7-30, more effectively inhibited GHRH-induced GH release in vitro in a superfused rat pituitary system than their parent compound JV-1-36 and had increased binding affinities to rat pituitary GHRH receptors, but they showed weaker inhibition of GH release in vivo than JV-1-36. All antagonists acylated with fatty acids containing 8-14 carbon atoms inhibited the proliferation of MiaPaCa-2 human pancreatic cancer cells in vitro better than JV-1-36 or JV-1-65. GHRH antagonist MZ-J-7-114 (5 mug/day) significantly suppressed the growth of PC-3 human androgen-independent prostate cancers xenografted into nude mice and reduced serum IGF-I levels, whereas antagonist JV-1-38 had no effect at the dose of 10 mug/day. GHRH antagonists including MZ-J-7-46 and MZ-J-7-114 acylated with octanoic acid and MZ-J-7-30 and MZ-J-7-110 acylated with 1,12-dodecanedicarboxylic acid represent relevant improvements over earlier antagonists. These and previous results suggest that this class of GHRH antagonists might be effective in the treatment of various cancers.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

2006

Date

2006-03-14T00:00:00.000Z

DOI

10.1073/pnas.0511348103