Physiological role of somatostatin-mediated autofeedback regulation for growth hormone: importance of growth hormone in triggering somatostatin release during a trough period of pulsatile growth hormone release in conscious male rats.
Sato. M M; Chihara. K K; Kita. T T; Kashio. Y Y; Okimura. Y Y; Kitajima. N N; Fujita. T T
Key Findings
- A natural GH burst triggers somatostatin release that dampens the following GH trough.
- If the main GH bursts are blocked, the somatostatin‑mediated suppression disappears.
- Blocking somatostatin with antibodies prevents the GH‑suppressing effect, indicating a direct feedback mechanism.
Practical Outcomes
- For people using GH‑releasing peptides like sermorelin, spacing doses to avoid the natural GH trough may improve effectiveness. Small, more frequent doses could keep somatostatin from building up and suppressing GH. Monitoring timing rather than just total daily dose may yield better GH‑related benefits for longevity and performance.
Summary
The study shows that when growth hormone (GH) spikes, it triggers a rise in somatostatin that then suppresses the next GH pulse. This feedback loop happens during the low‑point (trough) of the natural GH rhythm. Blocking somatostatin stops this suppression, meaning the timing of GH‑boosting agents matters.
Abstract
In mammals including human, it is generally accepted that growth hormone (GH) can regulate its own secretion through an autofeedback mechanism in which somatostatin (SRIF) may be involved. To explore a physiological role of SRIF-mediated GH autoregulation, the effect of exogenous human GH administration on plasma rat GH response to [D-Ala2, Nle27]-human GH-releasing hormone-(1-28)-agmatine (hGHRH-analog), which does not crossreact with anti-rat GH-releasing hormone gamma-globulin (GHRH-Ab), was examined in conscious male rats treated with GHRH-Ab in the absence and presence of anti-SRIF gamma-globulin (SRIF-Ab). Enhanced SRIF release during a trough period of natural pulsatile GH secretion, suggested by the blunted GH response to exogenous hGHRH-analog, no longer occurred when major GH secretory bursts were abolished by GHRH-Ab treatment. On the other hand, when hGH was administered in GHRH-Ab-treated rats so as to simulate the quantity and dynamic change of GH in hypophysial portal circulation in rats exhibiting pulsatile GH secretion, hGHRH-analog-induced GH rises were significantly suppressed during the period corresponding to a GH trough. This suppression was completely prevented by simultaneous treatment with SRIF-Ab. Furthermore, administration of bovine GH, but not ovine prolactin, resulted in significant suppression of hGHRH-analog-provoked GH rises. These findings suggest that enhanced SRIF release during a trough period of spontaneous GH secretory rhythm is induced by the preceding GH secretory burst, and also suggest a possible role for SRIF-mediated GH autoregulation in a physiological state.
Study Information
pubmed
1989
1989-07-01T00:00:00.000Z
10.1159/000125213
46