Pro-aging signaling, cancer and diabetes are reduced with LESS growth hormone effect

Research just published in the journal Science Translational Medicine is a further reminder of the critical need  for caution and sound physiological thinking when considering the use of growth hormone. The authors note in their introduction:

"Reduced activity of growth hormone (GH) and insulin-like growth factor–1 (IGF-1) signaling proteins or of their orthologs in nonhuman organisms...contribute to extended life span and protection against age-dependent damage or diseases..."

Pursuant to these earlier observations they formulated an important investigative objective:

"Mutations in growth signaling pathways [that diminish the GH effect] extend life span, as well as protect against age-dependent DNA damage in yeast and decrease insulin resistance and cancer in mice. To test their effect in humans, we monitored for 22 years Ecuadorian individuals who carry mutations in the growth hormone receptor (GHR) gene that lead to severe GHR and IGF-1 (insulin-like growth factor–1) deficiencies."

Combining this information with surveys that identified the cause and age of death for their subjects who died before this period, the data paint a compelling picture:

"The individuals with GHR deficiency exhibited only one nonlethal malignancy and no cases of diabetes, in contrast to a prevalence of 17% for cancer and 5% for diabetes in control subjects."

They describe earlier studies that help explain the very low incidence of cancer. In one, serum from subjects with GHR deficiency had reduced DNA breakage yet increased apoptosis in human mammary epithelial cells treated with hydrogen peroxide. In others, serum from GHR-deficient subjects caused reduced expression of RAS, PKA (protein kinase A), and TOR (target of rapamycin) and up-regulation of SOD2 (superoxide dismutase 2) in treated cells. These changes in signaling promote cellular protection and life-span extension in model organisms.Importantly, in their present study the authors also observed:

"......reduced insulin concentrations and a very low HOMA-IR (homeostatic model assessment–insulin resistance) index in individuals with GHR deficiency, indicating higher insulin sensitivity, which could explain the absence of diabetes in these subjects."

These comments, along with an earlier post on growth hormone research, are a plea for caution along with sound thinking. There seem to be good reasons why we have evolved to reduce growth hormone activity with age. The authors advance the idea that blocking growth hormone receptor function may...

"...prevent or reduce the incidence of cancer, diabetes, and other age-related diseases, including inflammatory disorders, stroke, and neurodegenerative diseases."

Clinicians and individuals tempted to experiment with growth hormone therapy should consider the authors' conclusion:

"Our finding that human GHRD [growth hormone receptor deficient] subjects are protected against age-related pathologies is consistent with the elevated cellular protection in both yeast and human cells with reduced expression of specific pro-growth genes and with the effect of serum from GHRD subjects in lowering their expression. The results from the human cohort also show similarities with those from GHRD- and GH-deficient mice, which display lower incidence (49%) or delayed occurrence of fatal neoplasms and increased insulin sensitivity... These results provide evidence for a role of evolutionarily conserved pathways in the control of aging and disease burden in humans."

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