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Sermorelin

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

Quick Stats
Studies 223
Trials 41
Score 3
2013 pubmed 45 citations

Growth hormone releasing hormone (GHRH) signaling modulates intermittent hypoxia-induced oxidative stress and cognitive deficits in mouse.

Nair. Deepti D; Ramesh. Vijay V; Li. Richard C RC; Schally. Andrew V AV; Gozal. David D

Key Findings

  • A GHRH agonist (JI‑34) reduced oxidative stress markers (MDA, 8‑OHdG) in the brain of mice undergoing intermittent hypoxia.
  • The agonist increased HIF‑1α DNA binding and up‑regulated IGF‑1 and erythropoietin expression in hippocampus and cortex.
  • Mice treated with the GHRH agonist showed markedly better performance in spatial learning (water maze) and reduced anxiety/depression‑like behavior compared to untreated hypoxic mice.

Practical Outcomes

  • For biohackers, this suggests that using a GHRH‑like peptide (e.g., sermorelin) might help mitigate brain oxidative stress and cognitive decline linked to poor sleep or intermittent hypoxia. However, the evidence is limited to mice, so any human protocol would be experimental, requiring cautious dosing and monitoring. It could be considered as a trial supplement for those with sleep‑apnea‑related issues, but clinical validation is still needed.

Summary

In mice that were exposed to the kind of oxygen drops that happen in sleep apnea, a drug that mimics the natural hormone that tells the body to release growth hormone (a GHRH agonist similar to sermorelin) helped protect the brain. It lowered markers of oxidative damage, boosted protective factors like IGF‑1 and erythropoietin, and improved performance on memory tests. The opposite—blocking GHRH—did not help.

Abstract

Intermittent hypoxia (IH) during sleep, such as occurs in obstructive sleep apnea (OSA), leads to degenerative changes in the hippocampus, and is associated with spatial learning deficits in adult mice. In both patients and murine models of OSA, the disease is associated with suppression of growth hormone (GH) secretion, which is actively involved in the growth, development, and function of the central nervous system (CNS). Recent work showed that exogenous GH therapy attenuated neurocognitive deficits elicited by IH during sleep in rats. Here, we show that administration of the Growth Hormone Releasing Hormone (GHRH) agonist JI-34 attenuates IH-induced neurocognitive deficits, anxiety, and depression in mice along with reduction in oxidative stress markers such as MDA and 8-hydroxydeoxyguanosine, and increases in hypoxia inducible factor-1α DNA binding and up-regulation of insulin growth factor-1 and erythropoietin expression. In contrast, treatment with a GHRH antagonist (MIA-602) during intermittent hypoxia did not affect any of the IH-induced deleterious effects in mice. Thus, exogenous GHRH administered as the formulation of a GHRH agonist may provide a viable therapeutic intervention to protect IH-vulnerable brain regions from OSA-associated neurocognitive dysfunction. Sleep apnea, characterized by chronic intermittent hypoxia (IH), is associated with substantial cognitive and behavioral deficits. Here, we show that administration of a GHRH agonist (JI-34) reduces oxidative stress, increases both HIF-1α nuclear binding and downstream expression of IGF1 and erythropoietin (EPO) in hippocampus and cortex, and markedly attenuates water maze performance deficits in mice exposed to intermittent hypoxia during sleep.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

2013

Date

2013-07-19T00:00:00.000Z

DOI

10.1111/jnc.12360

Citations

45

References

53