Splice variant of growth hormone-releasing hormone receptor drives esophageal squamous cell carcinoma conferring a therapeutic target.
Xiong. Xiao X; Ke. Xiurong X; Wang. Lu L; Yao. Zhimeng Z; Guo. Yi Y; Zhang. Xianyang X; Chen. Yuping Y; Pang. Chi Pui CP; Schally. Andrew V AV; Zhang. Hao H
Key Findings
- SV1, a splice variant of the GHRH receptor, is up‑regulated by hypoxia and drives esophageal squamous cell carcinoma progression.
- SV1 activates the glycolytic enzyme PFKM through the NF‑κB pathway, boosting cancer cell metabolism.
- The GHRH‑R antagonist MIA‑602 can reverse the SV1‑NF‑κB‑PFKM signaling and inhibit tumor growth.
Practical Outcomes
- For the biohacker community, this study does not provide actionable guidance on sermorelin use, dosing, or health optimization. It mainly informs cancer researchers about a new therapeutic target, but has no direct relevance to longevity, metabolic health, or performance protocols.
Summary
Scientists discovered that a special version of the growth‑hormone‑releasing hormone receptor (called SV1) makes esophageal cancer cells grow faster when oxygen is low, and that a drug called MIA‑602 can block this effect. This finding is about cancer biology, not about using sermorelin or other GHRH‑related peptides for health or performance.
Abstract
The extrahypothalamic growth hormone-releasing hormone (GHRH) and its cognate receptors (GHRH-Rs) and splice variants are expressed in a variety of cancers. It has been shown that the pituitary type of GHRH-R (pGHRH-R) mediates the inhibition of tumor growth induced by GHRH-R antagonists. However, GHRH-R antagonists can also suppress some cancers that do not express pGHRH-R, yet the underlying mechanisms have not been determined. Here, using human esophageal squamous cell carcinoma (ESCC) as a model, we were able to reveal that SV1, a known splice variant of GHRH-R, is responsible for the inhibition induced by GHRH-R antagonist MIA-602. We demonstrated that GHRH-R splice variant 1 (SV1) is a hypoxia-driven promoter of tumor progression. Hypoxia-elevated SV1 activates a key glycolytic enzyme, muscle-type phosphofructokinase (PFKM), through the nuclear factor kappa B (NF-κB) pathway, which enhances glycolytic metabolism and promotes progression of ESCC. The malignant actions induced by the SV1-NF-κB-PFKM pathway could be reversed by MIA-602. Altogether, our studies demonstrate a mechanism by which GHRH-R antagonists target SV1. Our findings suggest that SV1 is a hypoxia-induced oncogenic promoter which can be an alternative target of GHRH-R antagonists.
Study Information
pubmed
2020
2020-03-10T00:00:00.000Z
10.1073/pnas.1913433117
40
55