Agonistic analogs of growth hormone releasing hormone (GHRH) promote wound healing by stimulating the proliferation and survival of human dermal fibroblasts through ERK and AKT pathways.
Cui. Tengjiao T; Jimenez. Joaquin J JJ; Block. Norman L NL; Badiavas. Evangelos V EV; Rodriguez-Menocal. Luis L; Vila Granda. Ailin A; Cai. Renzhi R; Sha. Wei W; Zarandi. Marta M; Perez. Roberto R; Schally. Andrew V AV
Key Findings
- Both MR‑409 and MR‑502 increased primary human dermal fibroblast proliferation by more than 50% in vitro.
- The peptides protected fibroblasts from serum‑deprivation‑induced cell death, an effect blocked by MEK/ERK or PI3K/AKT inhibitors.
- Topical MR‑409 accelerated wound closure in animals in a dose‑dependent manner and reduced fibrosis.
Practical Outcomes
- For biohackers, the data suggest that GHRH‑like peptides could potentially enhance skin repair, but the research is still at the cell‑culture and animal stage. No human dosing or safety information is available, so it isn’t ready for self‑experimentation yet, though it may guide future supplement development or clinical trials.
Summary
A study tested two synthetic versions of growth‑hormone‑releasing hormone (MR‑409 and MR‑502) and found they make human skin cells grow faster and survive stress better. In mice, applying MR‑409 to wounds helped the cuts close quicker and left less scar tissue. The effects rely on the ERK and AKT signaling pathways, not on the usual IGF‑1 route.
Abstract
Decreased or impaired proliferation capability of dermal fibroblasts interferes with successful wound healing. Several growth factors tested failed to fully restore the growth of fibroblasts, possibly due to their rapid degradation by proteases. It is therefore critical to find new agents which have stimulatory effects on fibroblasts while being highly resistant to degradation. In such a scenario, the activities of two agonistic analogs of growth hormone releasing hormone (GHRH), MR-409 and MR-502, were evaluated for their impact on proliferation and survival of primary human dermal fibroblasts. In vitro, both analogs significantly stimulated cell growth by more than 50%. Under serum-depletion induced stress, fibroblasts treated with MR-409 or MR-502 demonstrated better survival rates than control. These effects can be inhibited by either PD98059 or wortmannin. Signaling through MEK/ERK1/2 and PI3K/AKT in an IGF-1 receptor-independent manner is required. In vivo, MR-409 promoted wound closure. Animals treated topically with MR-409 healed earlier than controls in a dose-dependent manner. Histologic examination revealed better wound contraction and less fibrosis in treated groups. In conclusion, MR-409 is a potent mitogenic and anti-apoptotic factor for primary human dermal fibroblasts. Its beneficial effects on wound healing make it a promising agent for future development.
Study Information
pubmed
2016
2016-08-16T00:00:00.000Z
10.18632/oncotarget.11024
34
53