CRH (Corticotropin-Releasing Hormone)

CRH is the 41-amino acid master regulator of the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis, driving ACTH release and the cortisol stress cascade. CRH is the endocrinological designation for the same molecule known as CRF in neuroscience, with particular relevance to adrenal function, placental biology, and inflammatory conditions.

Corticotropin-releasing hormone (CRH) is the 41-amino acid peptide master regulator of the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis, identical to the molecule known as corticotropin-releasing factor (CRF) in neuroscience literature. CRH is the preferred nomenclature in clinical endocrinology and the designation used by the HUGO Gene Nomenclature Committee for the gene (CRH).

Overview

CRH was first isolated and sequenced by Vale et al. (1981) from ovine hypothalamic extracts, completing the classical endocrine cascade of the HPA axis: hypothalamic CRH → anterior pituitary ACTH → adrenal cortisol. The peptide is synthesized as a 196-amino acid precursor (prepro-CRH) and processed to the mature 41-amino acid form in the parvocellular neurons of the paraventricular nucleus (PVN).

In clinical endocrinology, CRH's primary significance lies in its role as the apex regulator of adrenocortical function. The CRH stimulation test remains a cornerstone diagnostic tool for differentiating causes of Cushing's syndrome and assessing pituitary-adrenal reserve. Beyond classical endocrine function, CRH has emerged as a key molecule in placental biology, inflammatory disease, and reproductive endocrinology.

Mechanism of Action

HPA Axis Cascade

CRH is released from PVN parvocellular neuron terminals into the hypophyseal portal blood system, reaching anterior pituitary corticotroph cells where it binds CRF1R (CRHR1):

  1. CRF1R activation → Gs-coupled adenylyl cyclase activation → cAMP elevation → PKA activation
  2. POMC transcription → increased proopiomelanocortin gene expression
  3. ACTH secretion → POMC processing yields ACTH (and co-secreted beta-endorphin, beta-lipotropin)
  4. Adrenal cortisol → ACTH stimulates adrenal fasciculata zona cells to synthesize and release cortisol (corticosterone in rodents)
  5. Negative feedback → cortisol acts at hippocampus, hypothalamus (PVN), and pituitary to suppress CRH and ACTH release

AVP (arginine vasopressin) co-released from PVN neurons potentiates CRH-stimulated ACTH release synergistically via V1b receptors on corticotrophs. Under chronic stress, AVP contribution to ACTH drive increases while CRH contribution may plateau, shifting the balance of HPA axis regulation (Aguilera & Rabadan-Diehl, 2000).

Circadian Regulation

CRH release follows a robust circadian rhythm, with peak secretion in the early morning hours (4-8 AM) driving the cortisol awakening response, and nadir levels in late evening. This rhythm is entrained by the suprachiasmatic nucleus (SCN) via multisynaptic projections to the PVN and is disrupted in depression, jet lag, and shift work.

Pulsatile Secretion

CRH is released in pulses (approximately 2-3 per hour), generating corresponding ACTH and cortisol pulses. This pulsatility is important for maintaining adrenal responsiveness — continuous CRH exposure leads to CRF1R desensitization and reduced ACTH output.

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Research

Depression

The CRF hypothesis of depression, formalized by Charles Nemeroff and colleagues, proposes that sustained CRF hyperactivity drives the HPA axis hyperactivation, sleep disruption, appetite changes, psychomotor alterations, and anxiety observed in major depressive disorder (Nemeroff et al., 1984). Supporting evidence includes elevated CSF CRF in depressed patients, blunted ACTH response to exogenous CRF (indicating pituitary CRF1R downregulation from chronic CRF exposure), and normalization of CSF CRF levels with successful antidepressant treatment.

CRF1 Receptor Antagonists

The development of CRF1R antagonists represents a major translational effort in psychiatry:

  • Antalarmin: Early non-peptide CRF1R antagonist that reduces anxiety-like behavior in primates and rodents (Habib et al., 2000). Limited by poor pharmacokinetics for human use.
  • Pexacerfont (BMS-562086): Advanced to Phase III clinical trials for generalized anxiety disorder but failed to separate from placebo, dampening industry enthusiasm for the CRF1R antagonist class (Coric et al., 2010).
  • Verucerfont (GSK561679): Showed some efficacy in stress-induced alcohol craving in women with PTSD comorbidity, suggesting potential in specific patient subpopulations rather than broad anxiety disorders.

The clinical failure of CRF1R antagonists in broad psychiatric populations has been a significant setback, though renewed interest focuses on biomarker-stratified subpopulations with documented CRF hyperactivity.

PTSD

CRF signaling is prominently dysregulated in PTSD. CSF CRF levels are significantly elevated in combat veterans with PTSD compared to healthy controls (Baker et al., 1999). CRF circuits in the amygdala and BNST are critical for fear memory consolidation and the exaggerated startle response characteristic of PTSD. CRF1R antagonists have been investigated for PTSD, with verucerfont showing preliminary signals in reducing stress-potentiated fear responses.

Addiction

CRF signaling in the extended amygdala (central amygdala, BNST, nucleus accumbens shell) mediates the negative emotional state associated with drug withdrawal, which drives compulsive drug-seeking behavior (Koob, 2008). CRF1R antagonists reduce stress-induced reinstatement of drug-seeking for alcohol, cocaine, heroin, and nicotine in preclinical models. George Koob's allostatic model of addiction positions CRF as the key neurochemical mediator of the "dark side" of addiction — the transition from positive reinforcement to negative reinforcement (drug taking to relieve withdrawal distress).

Irritable Bowel Syndrome (IBS)

CRF is a major mediator of stress-induced GI dysfunction. CRF receptors are expressed throughout the enteric nervous system, and CRF administration increases colonic motility, visceral pain sensitivity, and intestinal permeability — all features of IBS (Taché & Bonaz, 2007). CRF1R activation stimulates colonic motility and secretion, while CRF2R activation inhibits gastric emptying. Peripheral CRF1R antagonists have shown efficacy in reducing stress-induced diarrhea and visceral hypersensitivity in preclinical models and early clinical trials.

Anxiety and Fear

CRF is one of the most extensively studied anxiogenic neuropeptides. Central administration of CRF in rodents produces a constellation of anxiety-like behaviors: decreased exploration, enhanced startle, increased freezing, and suppressed social interaction (Dunn & Berridge, 1990). These effects are mediated primarily by CRF1R in the central amygdala and BNST. CRF-overexpressing transgenic mice display chronic anxiety-like phenotypes, while CRF1R knockout mice show reduced anxiety responses to stress.

In humans, cerebrospinal fluid CRF concentrations are elevated in patients with major depression, PTSD, and anxiety disorders, correlating with symptom severity (Nemeroff et al., 1984). Postmortem studies of depressed suicide victims show upregulated CRF expression in the PVN and downregulated CRF1R in frontal cortex (consistent with chronic CRF hypersecretion).

Adrenal Insufficiency Assessment

CRH testing plays a role in evaluating secondary and tertiary adrenal insufficiency:

  • Secondary (pituitary): Blunted ACTH response to CRH with low baseline cortisol
  • Tertiary (hypothalamic): Delayed but eventually normal ACTH response to exogenous CRH, reflecting an intact pituitary that has been understimulated
  • Post-glucocorticoid withdrawal: CRH testing can assess recovery of the HPA axis after chronic exogenous glucocorticoid suppression

CRH Stimulation Test

The CRH stimulation test is a key clinical diagnostic tool (Nieman et al., 1986)):

  • Protocol: IV injection of ovine CRH (1 μg/kg) or human CRH (100 μg fixed dose), with serial ACTH and cortisol measurements at -15, 0, 15, 30, 45, 60, 90, and 120 minutes
  • Cushing's disease (pituitary): Exaggerated ACTH and cortisol response (>35-50% increase over baseline)
  • Ectopic ACTH syndrome: Blunted or absent ACTH response to CRH (tumor ACTH secretion is autonomous)
  • Primary adrenal Cushing's: Suppressed ACTH at baseline, no response to CRH
  • Inferior petrosal sinus sampling (IPSS) with CRH: Gold standard for differentiating pituitary from ectopic ACTH sources. Central-to-peripheral ACTH ratio >3:1 after CRH = pituitary source

Placental CRH

Placental CRH production is unique to primates and represents one of the most dramatic endocrine changes in pregnancy (McLean et al., 1995):

  • Exponential increase: Placental CRH rises exponentially from mid-gestation, reaching maternal plasma levels 1000-fold above non-pregnant values by term
  • Positive feedback: Unlike hypothalamic CRH (suppressed by cortisol), placental CRH expression is stimulated by cortisol, creating a positive feed-forward loop that amplifies CRH production as pregnancy progresses
  • Placental clock hypothesis: The rate of placental CRH rise predicts gestational length — women who deliver preterm have earlier and steeper CRH elevations, leading to the concept of a "placental clock" timing parturition
  • CRH-binding protein: Maternal CRH-BP levels fall sharply in the final weeks of pregnancy, releasing bound CRH and increasing bioactive CRH at the onset of labor

CRH in Inflammatory Conditions

CRH has significant immunomodulatory functions beyond the HPA axis (Chrousos, 1995):

  • Peripheral CRH: Immune cells (macrophages, lymphocytes, mast cells) and inflamed tissues express CRH locally. Peripheral CRH acts in a paracrine fashion to modulate inflammation, often with pro-inflammatory effects distinct from the immunosuppressive action of HPA-axis-derived cortisol
  • Mast cell activation: CRH activates mast cell degranulation, increasing vascular permeability and promoting neurogenic inflammation
  • Inflammatory bowel disease: Colonic CRH expression is elevated in ulcerative colitis and Crohn's disease, contributing to mucosal inflammation and altered motility
  • Rheumatoid arthritis: Synovial CRH expression is increased in inflamed joints, though its net effect (pro- vs. anti-inflammatory) depends on the balance with local cortisol production
  • Skin inflammation: CRH and CRF1R are expressed in skin, where they modulate keratinocyte proliferation, mast cell activation, and cutaneous inflammation

CRH Family Members

The CRH peptide family includes three urocortins (Bale & Vale, 2004):

  • Urocortin 1: Binds both CRF1R and CRF2R with high affinity. Involved in stress responses, appetite suppression, and cardioprotection
  • Urocortin 2 (stresscopin-related peptide): Selective CRF2R agonist. Mediates stress coping, cardiovascular regulation, and metabolic effects
  • Urocortin 3 (stresscopin): Selective CRF2R agonist. Involved in stress recovery, insulin secretion, and energy balance

Safety Profile

CRH has extensive clinical safety data from decades of diagnostic use:

  • CRH stimulation test: Generally well-tolerated. Common transient effects include facial flushing (70-80% of subjects), warmth, mild tachycardia, metallic taste, and brief urge to urinate. Effects resolve within 15-30 minutes. Rare: transient hypotension, vasovagal syncope
  • Ovine vs. human CRH: Ovine CRH produces more robust and prolonged ACTH responses; human CRH produces more transient responses. Both are used clinically
  • Pregnancy: Elevated endogenous CRH is physiological in pregnancy. Exogenous CRH testing is generally avoided in pregnancy due to theoretical concerns about uterine stimulation
  • Chronic excess: States of CRH hyperactivity (whether endogenous or iatrogenic glucocorticoid excess) lead to Cushingoid features, immunosuppression, osteoporosis, and metabolic syndrome via sustained cortisol elevation

Clinical Research Protocols

  • CRH stimulation test (diagnostic): Ovine CRH 1 μg/kg IV or human CRH 100 μg IV bolus over 30 seconds. Blood sampling for ACTH and cortisol at regular intervals over 2 hours
  • IPSS with CRH: Catheterize both inferior petrosal sinuses. Baseline ACTH sampling, then CRH 1 μg/kg IV. Sample at 2, 5, and 10 minutes post-CRH. Central:peripheral ACTH ratio >3:1 = pituitary Cushing's
  • Dexamethasone-CRH test: Dexamethasone 1.5 mg orally (in divided doses over prior day) followed by CRH 100 μg IV. Combines suppression and stimulation for enhanced diagnostic sensitivity in Cushing's

Pharmacokinetic Profile

CRH (Corticotropin-Releasing Hormone) — Pharmacokinetic Curve

IV (CRH stimulation test); research: ICV, SC
0%25%50%75%100%0m1h2h3h4h5hTimeConcentration (% peak)T_max 24mT_1/2 1h
Half-life: 1hT_max: 24mDuration shown: 5h

Ongoing & Future Research

  • Biomarker-stratified clinical trials of CRF1R antagonists in patients with documented CSF CRF elevation or dexamethasone non-suppression
  • Development of CRF2R-selective agonists for stress resilience enhancement
  • Investigation of CRF-BP modulators as an alternative to direct receptor antagonism
  • CRF circuit-specific optogenetic and chemogenetic studies to dissect anxiogenic vs. adaptive CRF pathways
  • Peripheral CRF1R antagonists for IBS with reduced CNS side effect potential
  • CRF's role in neuroinflammation and neurodegeneration (Alzheimer's disease, Parkinson's disease)
  • Sex differences in CRF signaling — estrogen regulation of CRF1R trafficking and sensitivity

Quick Start

Route
IV (CRH stimulation test); research: ICV, SC

Research Indications

Diagnostic

Strong Evidence
Cushing Syndrome Differential Diagnosis

CRF stimulation testing produces characteristic plasma ACTH and cortisol responses that distinguish pituitary Cushing disease from ectopic ACTH production.

Strong Evidence
Adrenal Insufficiency Assessment

Intravenous CRF bolus is used diagnostically to evaluate HPA axis integrity in patients with suspected adrenal insufficiency.

Neuropsychiatric

Moderate Evidence
Anxiety Disorders

CRF1 receptor antagonists such as pexacerfont are under investigation for generalized anxiety disorder, targeting stress-response pathways mediated by CRF signaling.

Moderate Evidence
Stress-Induced Addiction Relapse

Preclinical studies show CRF1 antagonists reduce stress-induced reinstatement of heroin, cocaine, nicotine, and alcohol-seeking behavior in animal models.

Gastrointestinal

Moderate Evidence
Irritable Bowel Syndrome (IBS)

Non-peptide CRF1 antagonists are in Phase II/III clinical trials for IBS, targeting the gut-brain axis stress-mediated component of the disorder.

Moderate Evidence
Inflammatory Bowel Disease

CRF1 antagonists show therapeutic potential for lower-GI inflammatory conditions including ulcerative colitis through peripheral CRF receptor modulation.

Research Protocols

oral

Central:peripheral ACTH ratio >3:1 = pituitary Cushing's - Dexamethasone-CRH test: Dexamethasone 1.5 mg orally (in divided doses over prior day) followed by CRH 100 μg IV.

GoalDoseFrequency
CRF1R antagonist trials100 mgPer protocol
Dexamethasone-CRH test1.5 mg, 100 μgPer protocol

What to Expect

What to Expect

Onset

Rapid onset expected; half-life of ~60 minutes (plasma) indicates fast-acting pharmacokinetics

10 minutes

Sample at 2, 5, and 10 minutes post-CRH.

Daily Use

Due to short half-life (~60 minutes (plasma)), effects are expected per-dose; consistent daily administration maintains therapeutic levels

Ongoing

Regular administration schedule required; effects are dose-dependent and do not persist between doses

Quality Indicators

What to look for

  • Well-established safety profile
  • Multiple peer-reviewed studies available

Frequently Asked Questions

References (9)

  1. [1]
  2. [2]
    Bale TL, Vale WW CRF and CRF receptors: role in stress responsivity and other behaviors Annu Rev Pharmacol Toxicol (2004)
  3. [3]
  4. [4]
    McLean M, Bisits A, Davies J, et al A placental clock controlling the length of human pregnancy Nat Med (1995)
  5. [5]
  6. [6]
  7. [7]
  8. [8]
    Jiang Z et al A GABAergic CRH neuron subset regulates stress-induced analgesia Nat Neurosci (2018)
  9. [9]
    Dedic N et al — Cross-disorder analysis of genic and regulatory SNPs implicates CRH and AVPR1B Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A (2018)
Updated 2026-03-088 citationsSources: peptide-wiki-mdx, peptide-wiki-mdx-v2

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