Quick Comparison

MK-677Sermorelin
Half-Life24 hours10-20 minutes
Typical DosageStandard: 10-25 mg oral once daily, typically before bed. Often cycled 8-12 weeks on, 4 weeks off. Some protocols use continuous low-dose (10 mg) for extended periods.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.
AdministrationOral (capsule or liquid)Subcutaneous injection (typically before bedtime)
Research Papers5 papers24 papers
Categories

Mechanism of Action

MK-677

MK-677 (Ibutamoren) is a non-peptide spiropiperidine compound that functions as a potent, orally active agonist of the growth hormone secretagogue receptor type 1a (GHS-R1a). Unlike peptide-based GH secretagogues that require injection, MK-677 is resistant to gastrointestinal degradation and has excellent oral bioavailability, making it unique among compounds that stimulate GH release through the ghrelin receptor.

Upon binding GHS-R1a in the anterior pituitary, MK-677 activates the Gq/11-coupled PLC/IP3/calcium signaling pathway, triggering GH vesicle exocytosis. It also acts on GHS-R1a receptors in the hypothalamus, stimulating GHRH neurons in the arcuate nucleus while suppressing somatostatin tone, further amplifying the GH secretory signal. Importantly, MK-677 preserves the endogenous pulsatile pattern of GH release — it amplifies pulse amplitude rather than creating a flat, sustained elevation.

The 24-hour half-life means a single daily dose maintains elevated GH and IGF-1 levels around the clock. In clinical studies, MK-677 increased IGF-1 levels by 40-60% in elderly subjects, with sustained effects over 12 months without significant tachyphylaxis. However, its ghrelin-mimetic activity also activates hypothalamic appetite circuits (orexigenic neurons expressing NPY/AgRP), producing the notable increase in hunger that many users report. The compound also has mild cortisol-raising effects and can impair insulin sensitivity with prolonged use, likely through sustained GH-mediated antagonism of insulin signaling in peripheral tissues. Despite promising clinical data for muscle wasting and osteoporosis, MK-677 has not completed the FDA approval process.

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

MK-677

Common

increased appetite (often intense), water retention and bloating, tiredness and fatigue, joint pain, numbness in hands.

Serious

raised fasting blood sugar and reduced insulin sensitivity with long-term use, potential to accelerate existing tumour growth.

Rare

significant swelling, carpal tunnel syndrome.

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.

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