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Research-Use-Only (RUO) content. Not for human consumption. Educational only — not medical advice.
GHRP · GHS-R1a agonist · Spoke 3.14

GHRP-2: the high-potency GH secretagogue — larger GH pulses than GHRP-6, but the cortisol trade-off remains.

SequenceD-Ala-D-β-Nal-Ala-Trp-D-Phe-Lys-NH₂ (6 aa) MW817.9 Da Half-life~30 min SC TargetGHS-R1a (ghrelin receptor) Updated2026-04-30

GHRP-2 (KP-102, also known as pralmorelin in its pharmaceutical form) is a second synthetic hexapeptide in the GHRP class, developed after GHRP-6 with structural modifications intended to improve metabolic stability and receptor binding. It produces the largest GH pulse of the early GHRP class at equivalent doses. Like GHRP-6, it co-stimulates cortisol and prolactin — the selectivity limitations that ipamorelin was subsequently engineered to address.

Key points

Structural modifications vs. GHRP-6

GHRP-2 incorporates D-amino acid residues at position 1 (D-Ala) and position 2 (D-β-Nal, a non-natural aromatic amino acid). Both modifications increase resistance to enzymatic degradation compared to GHRP-6's corresponding positions. The result is a longer effective half-life (~30 min vs ~15 min for GHRP-6 in rodent models) and improved receptor binding affinity at GHS-R1a.

Despite the structural differences, GHRP-2 and GHRP-6 share the same receptor target and produce qualitatively similar pharmacological profiles — the selectivity problem (cortisol/prolactin co-stimulation) is a property of the GHS-R1a receptor distribution, not a structural property that these modifications address. Ipamorelin's selectivity improvement required more fundamental design changes in the binding pharmacophore.

GH pulse pharmacology and pralmorelin data

GHRP-2 has published human PK/PD data including from its Japanese pharmaceutical development program as pralmorelin (GHRP Kaken 100):

Cortisol and prolactin: the same trade-off as GHRP-6

GHRP-2 produces comparable or slightly attenuated cortisol and prolactin responses versus GHRP-6 — the difference is small in practice. Both are substantially higher than ipamorelin in these non-GH endpoints. The mechanism is the same: GHS-R1a agonism at hypothalamic and pituitary sites drives ACTH and prolactin release via mechanisms independent of the somatotroph GH release pathway.

For research contexts where GH amplitude is the primary endpoint and cortisol/prolactin co-stimulation are acceptable (or desirable for diagnostic purposes), GHRP-2 is the highest-potency option in the classical GHRP class. For contexts where cortisol/prolactin co-stimulation is undesirable, ipamorelin remains the preferred compound.

GHRP-2 as a diagnostic tool (pralmorelin)

The pralmorelin (GHRP-2) diagnostic use in Japan is worth noting because it represents one of the more rigorous pharmacological characterizations of any research GHRP. The compound's reliability in stimulating a measurable GH response — and the characterization of that response across different populations — provides more pharmacological data than most research peptides. The diagnostic literature should be read with the caveat that it describes the expected pharmacological effect in clinical populations, not a therapeutic benefit.

Comparison table: GHRP-2 vs. GHRP-6 vs. ipamorelin

ParameterGHRP-2GHRP-6Ipamorelin
GH pulse amplitudeLargestLargeModerate-Large
Cortisol elevationModerate-HighHighMinimal
Prolactin elevationModerateModerate-HighMinimal
Appetite stimulationModerateStrongMinimal
Half-life (SC)~30 min~15–30 min~2 hr
Pharmaceutical registrationJapan (diagnostic)NonePhase II (discontinued)

Frequently asked

Is GHRP-2 stronger than GHRP-6?
GHRP-2 produces a larger GH pulse at equivalent doses in most head-to-head comparisons — approximately 20–50% higher GH amplitude depending on the study. This comes with comparable or slightly reduced cortisol and prolactin co-stimulation. The "stronger" label is accurate for GH output but should not imply improved safety or anabolic profile.
What is pralmorelin?
Pralmorelin is the INN (international nonproprietary name) for GHRP-2. It is registered in Japan under the name GHRP Kaken 100 as a diagnostic agent for testing pituitary GH reserve. This is the only pharmaceutical registration of GHRP-2 in any major regulatory jurisdiction.
How does GHRP-2 compare to ipamorelin for longevity research?
GHRP-2 produces higher GH pulses but with significant cortisol and prolactin co-stimulation. Ipamorelin produces reliable GH pulses with minimal cortisol/prolactin effects, making it more selective and preferred for most longevity research contexts where the cortisol elevation would partially offset GH benefits.
Can GHRP-2 and GHRH analogs be combined?
Yes — the same GHRP+GHRH synergy applies. GHRP-2 combined with CJC-1295 or sermorelin produces a supraadditive GH pulse. Because GHRP-2 is already the highest-amplitude GHRP in the class, the combined pulse can be very large — which increases the cortisol co-response proportionally.
Does GHRP-2 cause water retention?
GH elevation by any secretagogue can cause water retention via IGF-1-mediated sodium reabsorption. This is a class effect of GH secretagogues, not specific to GHRP-2. The degree of water retention correlates with the magnitude of GH elevation — which makes GHRP-2 more likely to produce this effect than ipamorelin at equivalent doses.
Reviewer sign-off Reviewed 2026-04-30 by the PeptideRadar Research Desk for RUO compliance, mechanism accuracy, and citation integrity. Corrections: corrections@peptideradar.net.