AOD-9604 is a 16-amino-acid peptide fragment derived from the C-terminal region of growth hormone (residues 177-191, with an added N-terminal tyrosine) that has been evaluated for its possible impact on lipid metabolism in various research models. This article reviews the widely-considered biochemical properties and hypothesized mechanisms of action of AOD-9604, summarizes key findings from experimental and early studies, and explores potential research domains where further investigations might clarify its utility, limitations, and relevant research applications.
Introduction
Metabolic disorders, obesity, and dysregulated lipid storage represent major challenges in research. The search for molecular agents that selectively modulate lipolysis (fat breakdown), inhibit lipogenesis (fat formation), or shift energy balance without widespread systemic growth-hormone-like impacts has led to interest in fragments of larger hormonal proteins.
AOD-9604 is one such fragment, engineered with the aim of retaining lipid-metabolic modulation while avoiding many of the broader growth-promoting pathways associated with full growth hormone (hGH). Research indicates that this peptide might alter fat deposition and lipid oxidation in research models, via specific receptors and molecular pathways, without inducing IGF-1 (Insulin-like Growth Factor-1) upregulation.
Biochemical Properties and Molecular Structure
Mechanisms of Action (Hypothesized / Supported in Studies of Laboratory Models)
Research suggests that in various obese research models, AOD-9604 may stimulate lipolysis in adipose tissue, measured by markers like plasma glycerol release, and suppresses lipogenesis, possibly by down-regulating enzymes involved in the acetyl-CoA carboxylase (ACC) pathway.
One line of investigation indicates that AOD-9604 may increase expression of β3-adrenergic receptor (β3-AR) RNA in adipose tissue of obese research models, where such receptor expression tends to be repressed. In models lacking β3-AR (knock-out research models), many of the chronic impacts on weight and fat accumulation observed in wild-type models are mitigated, suggesting β3-AR plays a significant role in the sustained adipose modulation by AOD-9604.
Data indicates that AOD-9604 might not meaningfully increase IGF-1 levels in research models, nor does it engage in mitogenic actions associated with hGH. Binding studies and the absence of hGH-receptor-mediated cell proliferation in vitro support this non-engagement.
Acute exposure of AOD-9604 in some models seems to increase fat oxidation and energy expenditure, even when β3-AR is non-functional, though the magnitude of such responses is lessened. This suggests that there may be β3-AR-independent pathways (perhaps via mitochondrial function, or indirect modulation via other receptor systems) that contribute to the acute lipid oxidation properties.
Key Findings from Early Investigations
Potential Research Domains
Given what research has been published, here are areas where AOD-9604 may be of interest for further exploration, with rationales and open questions:
Because AOD-9604 appears to reduce abdominal/visceral adipose accumulation in some models, investigation of its impact on fat distribution (rather than gross weight) may be fruitful. Studies suggest that it might serve as a tool to parse out the molecular control of adipose tissue region-specific regulation, particularly visceral versus subcutaneous fat.
Research indicates that, given its speculated lack of impact on appetite and IGF-1, combination with agents that influence energy intake (e.g., GLP-1 pathway agonists) may allow synergistic or additive modulation of weight-relevant parameters in research models.
Because β3-AR appears implicated in chronic responses to AOD-9604, detailed research into how AOD-9604 may modulate β3-AR RNA expression, translation, receptor signaling, desensitization, and interaction with other adrenergic or non-adrenergic lipolytic systems might clarify its mode of action and potential limitations.
Acute metabolic profiling (oxygen consumption, substrate utilization) in model organisms may help elucidate whether AOD-9604 directly impacts mitochondrial function, lipid oxidation in muscle or liver, or whether its impact is limited to adipose tissue lipid mobilization.
Since modulation of lipogenesis and lipolysis in adipocytes and hepatocytes is part of its speculated impacts, investigation in models of hepatic steatosis or other lipid overload disorders may be warranted to see whether AOD-9604 might mitigate fat deposition in non-adipose tissues.
Limitations and Open Questions (in Research Context)
While research suggests interesting properties, there remain uncertainties to investigate:
Conclusion
AOD-9604 is a fragment of growth hormone theoretically engineered to isolate certain lipid-metabolic modulation properties. Research indicates that it might stimulate lipolysis, inhibit lipogenesis, increase β3-adrenergic receptor expression, and increase fat oxidation and energy expenditure in certain settings, while avoiding activation of IGF-1-mediated growth pathways. Yet, data from longer-term investigations are mixed about substantive weight change over placebo under intervention, and several mechanistic details remain unresolved.
For researchers, AOD-9604 presents an interesting probe into fat regulation, adipose tissue biology, lipid oxidation, and metabolic signaling. Exploration of combination approaches, detailed receptor mapping, pharmacokinetics, metabolic tissue specificity, and applications in liver or other organs may yield valuable insights. As always, rigorous experimental design and careful interpretation are essential. Visit Core Peptides for the most informative peptide studies.
References
[i] Ng, F. M., Sun, J., Sharma, L., Libinaki, R., Jiang, W. J., & Gianello, R. (2000). Metabolic studies of a synthetic lipolytic domain (AOD9604) of human growth hormone.Hormone Research, 53(6), 274-278. https://doi.org/10.1159/000053183
[ii] Heffernan, M., Summers, R. J., Thorburn, A. W., Ogru, E., Gianello, R., & Ng, F. M. (2001). The effects of human GH and its lipolytic fragment (AOD9604) on lipid metabolism following chronic treatment in obese mice and β3-AR knock-out mice. Endocrinology, 142(12), 5182-5189. https://doi.org/10.1210/endo.142.12.8522
[iii] Heffernan, M. A., Summers, R. J., Thorburn, A. W., Ogru, E., Gianello, R., Jiang, W. J., & Ng, F. M. (2001). Increase of fat oxidation and weight loss in obese mice caused by chronic treatment with human growth hormone or a modified C-terminal fragment. International Journal of Obesity and Related Metabolic Disorders, 25(10), 1442-1449. https://doi.org/10.1038/sj.ijo.0801740
[iv] Moré, M. I., & Kenley, D., et al. (2014). Safety and Metabolism of AOD9604, a Novel Nutraceutical Ingredient for Improved Metabolic Health. Journal of Endocrinology & Metabolism, 4(3), 64-77. http://dx.doi.org/10.14740/jem213w
[v] Stier, H., Vos, E., Kenley, D. (2013). Safety and tolerability of the hexadecapeptide AOD9604 in humans. Journal of Endocrinology and Metabolism, 3(1-2), 7-15.
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