A GHRH-blocking compound was shown for the first time to inhibit a key protein called focal adhesion kinase (FAK) in lung cancer cells, which plays an important role in cancer cell movement and invasion. The compound also reduced levels of proteins involved in blood vessel formation (VEGF) and tissue breakdown (MMP-2, MMP-9), and these effects were counteracted by GHRH itself. These findings help explain how GHRH blockers may work against lung cancer by limiting both tumor spread and new blood vessel growth.
Siejka, Agnieszka; Barabutis, Nektarios; Schally, Andrew V