Plain Language Summary
Researchers tested four new growth hormone-releasing hormone (GHRH) analogs modified with a C-terminal agmatine group and found that several were dramatically more potent than standard sermorelin (hGHRH(1-29)NH2) at stimulating growth hormone release in cows. The most effective analogs, JG-73 and MZ-2-75, were approximately 11 times more potent on a weight basis, demonstrating that agmatine substitution can substantially enhance the biological activity of GHRH peptides.
Abstract
Four new growth hormone-releasing hormone (GHRH) analogs with C-terminal agmatine were compared with the parent human GHRH(1-29)NH2 fragment to assess their abilities to increase serum concentrations of growth hormone (GH) in the bovine. The four analogs were: [D-Ala2, Nle27] GHRH(1-28)Agm (JG-73); [desNH2-Tyr1, Ala15, Nle27] GHRH(1-28)Agm (MZ-2-51); [desNH2-Tyr1, Ala15, D-Lys21, Nle27] GHRH(1-28)Agm (MZ-2-75); and [desNH2-Tyr1, D-Lys12,21, Ala15, Nle27] GHRH(1-28)Agm (MZ-2-87). The special characteristic of all four GHRH analogs is that arginine was replaced by agmatine (Agm) in Position 29. Five pregnant Holstein cows received these peptides subcutaneously at the following doses: 0.0156, 0.0625, 0.25, 1, and 4 micrograms/kg body wt. Each cow received each analog-dose combination according to a 5 x 5 Greco-Latin square design repeated for the 5-week treatment. Each cow also received saline vehicle only at the end of the 5-week treatment. Blood samples were collected from 30 min before until 360 min after treatment injection. Total area under the GH response curves for the 6-hr sampling period for each dose of each GHRH analog was compared. There was a linear dose-dependent GH release in response to hGHRH(1-29)NH2 and its four GHRH(1-28)Agm analogs. At the dose of 0.25 micrograms/kg, two GHRH analogs, JG-73 and MZ-2-75, stimulated greater GH release than hGHRH(1-29)NH2 (P less than 0.05). No differences were seen at the two lowest doses, 0.0625 and 0.156 micrograms/kg. When both total area under the GH response curves and GH peak amplitudes for each treatment were averaged for all doses, JG-73 and MZ-2-75 stimulated greater GH release than hGHRH(1-29)NH2 (P less than 0.05). In summary, three GHRH(1-28)Agm analogs, JG-73, MZ-2-75, and MZ-2-51, were found to be 11.8, 11.3, and 6.5 times more potent, respectively, on a weight basis, than hGHRH(1-29)NH2 in stimulating the release of GH in cows.
Authors
Roberge, S; Johnson, H E; Zarandi, M; Schally, A V; Reeves, J J