Menu
Peptide Database
Results
No peptides found
Featured

Use search to browse all 100+ peptides

Sermorelin

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

Quick Stats
Studies 223
Trials 41
Score 1
2008 pubmed

Inhibition of estrogen receptor positive and negative breast cancer cell lines with a growth hormone-releasing hormone antagonist.

Seitz. Stephan S; Hohla. Florian F; Schally. Andrew V AV; Moder. Angelika A; Engel. Joerg B JB; Horn. Felicitas F; Varga. Josef J; Zarandi. Marta M; Ortmann. Olaf O; Köster. Frank F; Buchholz. Stefan S

Key Findings

  • The GHRH antagonist JMR‑132 strongly reduced growth of both estrogen‑positive and estrogen‑negative breast cancer cells in vitro.
  • Adding GHRH boosted cancer cell growth, showing the cells rely on their own GHRH signaling.
  • The cancer cells produce GHRH and have the pituitary‑type GHRH receptor, which likely mediates the drug’s effect.

Practical Outcomes

  • For biohackers, this research doesn’t translate into a usable protocol or dosage. It highlights that blocking GHRH could be a future cancer strategy, but there’s no immediate relevance to sermorelin use or self‑directed health optimization.

Summary

A lab study found that a new compound that blocks growth‑hormone‑releasing hormone (GHRH) can stop breast cancer cells from growing, no matter whether they have estrogen receptors or not. The cancer cells actually make their own GHRH, which seems to help them multiply, and the blocker shut this down. This work is still in cell dishes, not in people, and uses a different molecule than the commonly used sermorelin.

Abstract

GHRH antagonists have been shown to inhibit growth of various human cancer cell lines xenografted into nude mice including estrogen receptor negative human breast cancers. Previous observations also suggest that GHRH locally produced in diverse neoplasms including breast cancer might directly affect proliferation of tumor cells. In the present study we demonstrate that a novel highly potent GHRH antagonist JMR-132 strongly inhibits the proliferation of both estrogen receptor negative SKBR 3 and estrogen receptor positive ZR 75 human breast cancer cell lines in vitro. The proliferation in vitro of ZR 75 and SKBR 3 was increased after direct stimulation with GHRH(1-29)NH2. The GHRH antagonist JMR-132 had a significant antiproliferative activity in the absence of GHRH and nullified the proliferative effect of GHRH in these cell lines. SKBR 3 and ZR 75 expressed the GHRH ligand as well as the pituitary type of GHRH-receptor, which likely appears to mediate the antiproliferative mechanisms in these cell lines. These in vitro results suggest that JMR-132 is a potent inhibitor of breast cancer growth, independent of the estrogen receptor status. Further investigations on the combination treatment with endocrine agents affecting the estrogen pathway and GRHR antagonists are needed in order to improve the treatment of breast cancer.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

2008