Quick Comparison
| ACE-031 | Sermorelin | |
|---|---|---|
| Half-Life | 240-336 hours (10-14 days) | 10-20 minutes |
| Typical Dosage | Clinical trials: 0.5-3 mg/kg intravenous every 2 weeks. Research doses vary. Very limited availability. No established dosing for off-label use. | Standard: 200-300 mcg subcutaneous once daily before bed. Often cycled 5 days on, 2 days off. Treatment courses of 3-6 months. Can be combined with Ipamorelin for enhanced GH release. |
| Administration | Intravenous or subcutaneous injection | Subcutaneous injection (typically before bedtime) |
| Research Papers | 1 papers | 24 papers |
| Categories |
Mechanism of Action
ACE-031
ACE-031 is a recombinant fusion protein consisting of the extracellular domain of the activin type IIB receptor (ActRIIB) linked to the Fc portion of human IgG1 antibody. This design creates a soluble 'decoy receptor' that circulates in the bloodstream and intercepts TGF-beta superfamily ligands before they can bind to membrane-bound ActRIIB receptors on target tissues.
The therapeutic power — and the safety challenge — of ACE-031 lies in its broad ligand-binding profile. While follistatin primarily targets myostatin and activin, ActRIIB is the shared receptor for multiple TGF-beta family members including myostatin (GDF-8), activin A, activin B, GDF-11, and BMP-9/BMP-10. By trapping all of these simultaneously, ACE-031 produces rapid and dramatic increases in lean muscle mass — in clinical trials, subjects gained measurable lean mass within 2-4 weeks without exercise. The removal of myostatin allows unrestricted myogenic differentiation and protein synthesis, while blocking activin further enhances this effect.
However, the broad ligand trap mechanism also blocks BMP-9 and BMP-10, which are critical regulators of vascular endothelial homeostasis and angiogenesis. BMP-9 signaling through ALK1 (activin receptor-like kinase 1) on endothelial cells maintains vascular integrity and prevents the formation of aberrant blood vessel structures. Blocking this pathway produces the same vascular defects seen in hereditary hemorrhagic telangiectasia (HHT), a genetic condition caused by mutations in the ALK1/endoglin/BMP-9 pathway — specifically, nosebleeds, gum bleeding, and telangiectasias (dilated superficial blood vessels). It was these vascular side effects that forced Acceleron Pharma to halt the Duchenne muscular dystrophy clinical trial, demonstrating the difficulty of using broad-spectrum ligand traps without off-target effects.
Sermorelin
Sermorelin is a synthetic peptide consisting of the first 29 amino acids of endogenous growth hormone-releasing hormone (GHRH 1-44). These 29 residues contain the full biological activity domain required for GHRH receptor activation — the remaining 15 amino acids of native GHRH are not necessary for receptor binding or signal transduction.
Sermorelin binds to the GHRH receptor on anterior pituitary somatotrophs, activating the Gs/adenylyl cyclase pathway to increase intracellular cAMP. This triggers PKA-mediated phosphorylation of CREB and stimulates both GH gene transcription and the release of pre-formed GH vesicles. Because sermorelin works through the body's own regulatory system, GH release occurs in a physiological pulsatile pattern governed by the interplay between GHRH stimulation and somatostatin inhibition — the hypothalamic-pituitary feedback loop remains intact.
This preservation of feedback regulation is sermorelin's primary safety advantage over exogenous GH administration. The pituitary gland can only release as much GH as it has synthesized, providing a natural ceiling effect that prevents supraphysiological GH levels. Somatostatin feedback still functions normally, ensuring appropriate pulse spacing. Additionally, because the pituitary itself is being stimulated rather than bypassed, sermorelin may help maintain or even restore pituitary somatotroph function over time. It was the first GHRH analogue to receive FDA approval (as Geref), specifically for evaluating pituitary GH reserve and treating pediatric GH deficiency, giving it one of the longest clinical track records among GH-stimulating peptides.
Risks & Safety
ACE-031
Common
nosebleeds, bleeding gums, visible dilated blood vessels on the skin.
Serious
disruption of blood vessel integrity, potential for gut bleeding; clinical trial halted due to these effects.
Rare
severe bleeding events.
Sermorelin
Common
injection site redness and swelling, headache, facial flushing, brief dizziness.
Serious
theoretical risk of promoting existing tumours.
Rare
allergic reactions, hives at injection site.
Full Profiles
ACE-031 →
An experimental drug that acts as a 'decoy' to intercept myostatin and other muscle-limiting signals before they reach your muscles. It produced rapid muscle gains in clinical trials without any exercise. However, development was halted because it also accidentally blocked signals needed to maintain healthy blood vessels, causing nosebleeds and visible broken blood vessels. A powerful proof-of-concept that myostatin blocking works, but too dangerous in its current form.
Sermorelin →
One of the safest and most studied growth hormone peptides, with the longest track record in clinical use. It was actually FDA-approved (as Geref) for children with growth hormone deficiency before being discontinued for business reasons, not safety concerns. Like CJC-1295, it tells your pituitary to release its own growth hormone naturally. Popular in anti-aging medicine as a gentle, well-understood option.