Essential role of p21/waf1 in the mediation of the anti-proliferative effects of GHRH antagonist JMR-132.
Volakaki. Aspasia-Athina AA; Lafkas. Daniel D; Kassi. Eva E; Schally. Andrew V AV; Papavassiliou. Athanasios G AG; Kiaris. Hippokratis H
Key Findings
- GHRH antagonist JMR-132 reduces proliferation of A549 lung cancer cells.
- JMR-132 increases p21 protein levels in a dose‑dependent manner.
- Knocking down p21 eliminates the anti‑proliferative effect of JMR-132 in multiple cell types.
Practical Outcomes
- For biohackers using GHRH‑based peptides like sermorelin, this research suggests that GHRH signaling can promote cell growth in some cancers, so long‑term high‑dose use might warrant caution. However, the findings focus on a GHRH blocker, not an agonist, so there are no direct dosing changes for sermorelin, but the data highlight the importance of monitoring cancer risk when manipulating the GHRH pathway.
Summary
The study shows that blocking the hormone GHRH with a drug called JMR-132 slows down the growth of lung cancer cells by raising a protein called p21, which tells cells to stop dividing. If p21 is removed, the drug no longer works, meaning the anti‑cancer effect depends on p21. Similar results were seen in colon cancer cells and normal bone cells.
Abstract
GHRH, besides its neuroendocrine action in controlling the release of GH from the pituitary, stimulates the growth of various cancers in vivo and in vitro by direct mechanism(s). However, the molecular mechanism that mediates these proliferative effects of GHRH in extrapituitary tissues remains poorly characterized. In the present study, we investigated whether the tumor suppressor p21/waf1 is involved in the mediation of the proliferative effects of GHRH in A549 human lung cancer epithelial cells. Exposure of A549 cells to the GHRH antagonist JMR-132 caused a significant inhibition in the rate of cell proliferation. In A549 cells, GHRH suppressed while JMR-132 increased the levels of p21 expression in a dose-dependent manner. This suggests that GHRH could regulate p21 levels. We then evaluated whether p21 is required in A549 cells for the regulation of cell proliferation by GHRH. To this end, we knocked-down p21 expression in A549 cells by siRNA and assessed the effects of antagonist JMR-132 on cell proliferation. We found that the loss of p21 expression abolished the anti-proliferative effects of JMR-132. Suppression of p21 expression by siRNA in human HT29 colon cancer cells and non-transformed mouse osteoblasts KS483 also blocked the anti-proliferative effects of JMR-132 suggesting that the regulation of cell proliferation by GHRH is p21 dependent. These results shed light on the molecular mechanism of action of GHRH antagonists in tumor tissues and suggest that the antineoplastic activity of GHRH antagonists could be considered for the treatment of cancers expressing p21.
Study Information
pubmed
2008
2008-09-02T00:00:00.000Z
10.1677/jme-08-0106