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Sermorelin

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

Quick Stats
Studies 223
Trials 41
Score 2
2012 pubmed 74 citations

Antagonists of growth hormone-releasing hormone inhibit growth of androgen-independent prostate cancer through inactivation of ERK and Akt kinases.

Rick. Ferenc G FG; Schally. Andrew V AV; Szalontay. Luca L; Block. Norman L NL; Szepeshazi. Karoly K; Nadji. Mehrdad M; Zarandi. Marta M; Hohla. Florian F; Buchholz. Stefan S; Seitz. Stephan S

Key Findings

  • The GHRH antagonist JMR-132 reduced PC-3 prostate cancer cell proliferation in a dose‑dependent way.
  • s own GHRH production by 66%.",

Practical Outcomes

  • For biohackers, this study suggests that blocking GHRH signaling might have anti‑cancer benefits, but the work is still early‑stage and done in cells and mice, not people. It does not provide any dosage or protocol for human use of sermorelin or related peptides, and it highlights that stimulating GHRH (as sermorelin does) could theoretically support pathways that some cancers exploit. Until human trials are done, the findings are mainly of scientific interest rather than a direct actionable strategy.

Summary

In lab tests and mouse experiments, a drug that blocks the hormone that normally tells the pituitary to release growth hormone (called a GHRH antagonist) slowed down the growth of a type of prostate cancer that doesn't need male hormones. The drug cut tumor size by about 60% and turned off two key cell‑growth pathways (ERK and Akt).

Abstract

The management of castration-resistant prostate cancer (CRPC) presents a clinical challenge because of limitations in efficacy of current therapies. Novel therapeutic strategies for the treatment of CRPC are needed. Antagonists of hypothalamic growth hormone-releasing hormone (GHRH) inhibit growth of various malignancies, including androgen-dependent and independent prostate cancer, by suppressing diverse tumoral growth factors, especially GHRH itself, which acts as a potent autocrine/paracrine growth factor in many tumors. We evaluated the effects of the GHRH antagonist, JMR-132, on PC-3 human androgen-independent prostate cancer cells in vitro and in vivo. JMR-132 suppressed the proliferation of PC-3 cells in vitro in a dose-dependent manner and significantly inhibited growth of PC-3 tumors by 61% (P < 0.05). The expression of GHRH, GHRH receptors, and their main splice variant, SV1, in PC-3 cells and tumor xenografts was demonstrated by RT-PCR and Western blot. The content of GHRH protein in PC-3 xenografts was lowered markedly, by 66.3% (P < 0.01), after treatment with JMR-132. GHRH induced a significant increase in levels of ERK, but JMR-132 abolished this outcome. Our findings indicate that inhibition of PC-3 prostate cancer by JMR-132 involves inactivation of Akt and ERK. The inhibitory effect produced by GHRH antagonist can result in part from inactivation of the PI3K/Akt/mammalian target of rapamycin and Raf/MEK/ERK pathways and from the reduction in GHRH produced by cancer cells. Our findings support the role of GHRH as an autocrine growth factor in prostate cancer and suggest that antagonists of GHRH should be considered for further development as therapy for CRPC.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

2012

Date

2012-01-18T00:00:00.000Z

DOI

10.1073/pnas.1120588109

Citations

74

References

50