Potent agonists of growth hormone-releasing hormone. II.
Zarandi. M M; Serfozo. P P; Zsigo. J J; Deutch. A H AH; Janaky. T T; Olsen. D B DB; Bajusz. S S; Schally. A V AV
Key Findings
- Agmatine at the C‑terminus (position 29) can boost GH‑releasing activity, with some analogs 2.8‑5.7× more potent than regular GH‑RH(1‑29)NH2.
- Adding Asn28 to the bovine‑type sequence reduces potency compared to human‑type analogs.
- Modifications like Lys‑NH2 at the end, beta‑Ala, GABA, or Phe at position 15 lower activity.
Practical Outcomes
- For now, sermorelin remains the practical option; the study hints that future, more potent GH‑RH analogs could be developed, but they’re not ready for self‑experimentation. Stick to established dosing and monitor emerging research for any new, safer, and more effective versions.
Summary
Researchers made several modified versions of the growth‑hormone‑releasing hormone (the same family as sermorelin) and tested them in lab dishes. Some of the new peptides were up to six times more active than the standard hormone, but a few changes actually made them weaker. The work shows which tweaks help or hurt potency, but the compounds aren’t sold or tested in people yet.
Abstract
Analogs of the 29-amino acid sequence of growth hormone-releasing hormone (GH-RH) with agmatine (Agm) or Lys-NH2 in position 29 have been synthesized by the solid-phase method, purified, and tested in vitro. Except for one peptide, all analogs contained desaminotyrosine (Dat) in position 1. All contained Nle27 in order to avoid oxidation of Met27. Some peptides contained one or more additional L- or D-amino acid substitutions in positions 2, 12, 15, 21, 27 and/or 28. Analogs [Dat1, Ala15, Nle27, Asn28]GH-RH(1-28)Agm (II, [Asn28]-Mz-2-51); [Dat1, Ala15, D-Lys21, Nle27, Asn28]GH-RH(1-28)Agm (III, MZ-3-125); and [Dat1, D-Asn8, Ala15, D-Lys21, Nl27, Asn28]GH-RH(1-28)Agm(IV, MZ-3-129) were 5.7, 2.8, and 3.9 times more potent in vitro, respectively, than GH-RH(1-29)NH2. However, if we compare the potencies of peptides II and III (analogs of the bovine sequence) with those of the analogs of human GH-RH (XII and XIII) [Dat1, Ala15, Nle27]GH-RH(1-28)Agm; [Dat1, Ala15, D-Lys21, Nle27]GH-RH(1-28)Agm, respectively, the GH-releasing potency was decreased by 50% and 33%, respectively, by the incorporation of Asn28. Our studies indicate that Lys-NH2 at the C-terminus of GH-RH(1-29) and/or beta-Ala, GABA (gamma-aminobutyric acid), and Phe in position 15 are disadvantageous, but potent GH-RH analogs can result from the combination of agmatine in position 29 with other substitutions.
Study Information
pubmed
1992