67 research outputs found
Dose-response effects of a new growth hormone receptor antagonist (B2036-PEG) on circulating, hepatic and renal expression of the growth hormone/insulin-like growth factor system in adult mice
The effects of growth hormone (GH) in regulating the expression of the
hepatic and renal GH and insulin-like growth factor (IGF) system were
studied by administering a novel GH receptor antagonist (GHRA) (B2036-PEG)
at different doses (0, 1.25, 2.5, 5 and 10 mg/kg/day) to mice for 7 days.
No differences were observed in the groups with respect to body weight,
food consumption or blood glucose. However, a dose-dependent decrease was
observed in circulating IGF-I levels and in hepatic and renal IGF-I levels
at the highest doses. In contrast, in the 5 and 10 mg/kg/day GHRA groups,
circulating and hepatic transcriptional IGF binding protein-3 (IGFBP-3)
levels were not modified, likely resulting in a significantly decreased
IGF-I/IGFBP-3 ratio. Hepatic GH receptor (GHR) and GH binding protein
(GHBP) mRNA levels increased significantly in all GHRA dosage groups.
Endogenous circulatory GH levels increased significantly in the 2.5 and 5
mg/kg/day GHRA groups. Remarkably, increased circulating IGFBP-4 and
hepatic IGFBP-4 mRNA levels were observed in all GHRA administration
groups. Renal GHR and GHBP mRNA levels were not modified by GHRA
administration at the highest doses. Also, renal IGFBP-3 mRNA levels
remained unchanged in most GHRA administration groups, whereas IGFBP-1, -4
and -5 mRNA levels were significantly increased in the 5 and 10 mg/kg/day
GHRA administration groups. In conclusion, the effects of a specific GHR
blockade on circulating, hepatic and renal GH/IGF axis reported here, may
prove useful in the future clinical use of GHRAs
Kidney growth in normal and diabetic mice is not affected by human insulin-like growth factor binding protein-1 administration
Insulin-like growth factor I (IGF-I) accumulates in the kidney following
the onset of diabetes, initiating diabetic renal hypertrophy. Increased
renal IGF-I protein content, which is not reflected in messenger RNA
(mRNA) levels, suggests that renal IGF-I accumulation is due to
sequestration of circulating IGF-I rather than to local synthesis. It has
been suggested that IGF-I is trapped in the kidney by IGF binding protein
1 (IGFBP-1). We administered purified human IGFBP-1 (hIGFBP-1) to
nondiabetic and diabetic mice as three daily sc injections for 14 days,
starting 6 days after induction of streptozotocin diabetes when the
animals were overtly diabetic. Markers of early diabetic renal changes
(i.e., increased kidney weight, glomerular volume, and albuminuria)
coincided with accumulation of renal cortical IGF-I despite decreased mRNA
levels in 20-day diabetic mice. Human IGFBP-1 administration had no effect
on increased kidney weight or albuminuria in early diabetes, although it
abolished renal cortical IGF-I accumulation and glomerular hypertrophy in
diabetic mice. Increased IGF-I levels in kidneys of normal mice receiving
hIGFBP-1 were not reflected on kidney parameters. IGFBP-1 administration
in diabetic mice had only minor effects on diabetic renal changes.
Accordingly, these results did not support the hypothesis that IGFBP-1
plays a major role in early renal changes in diabetes
The effect of epidermal growth factor and IGF-I infusion on hepatic and renal expression of the IGF-system in adult female rats
Systemic administration of epidermal growth factor (EGF) in neonatal rats
results in reduced body weight gain and decreased circulating levels of
IGF-I, suggesting its involvement in EGF-induced growth retardation. We
investigated the effect of EGF and/or IGF-I administration for 7 days on
circulating IGF-I and IGFBP levels and hepatic and renal IGF-system mRNA
expression profiles in adult female rats. EGF administration (30
microg/rat/day) did not influence body weight, liver or kidney weight. In
contrast, IGF-I (400 microg/rat/day) and EGF/IGF-I administration
increased both body weight and kidney weight. Also, serum IGF-I and the 30
kDa IGFBPs (IGFBP-1 and -2) were significantly increased in these groups.
Serum IGFBP-3 levels increased in the IGF-I group along with increased
hepatic IGFBP-1 and -3 mRNA levels. In contrast, in the EGF administration
group serum IGFBP-3 levels were significantly decreased; however, the mRNA
levels remained unchanged. In the EGF/IGF-I administration group, serum
IGF-I and IGFBP-3 levels were significantly lowered when compared with the
IGF-I administration group. This was in contrast to the effect on kidney
weight increase that was identical for the IGF-I and EGF/IGF-I groups. The
decrease in serum IGFBP-3 was not reflected at the hepatic IGFBP-3 mRNA
level. IGFBP-3 expression might be regulated at a post-transcriptional
level although EGF induced IGFBP-3 proteolysis could not be demonstrated
in vitro. We conclude that EGF administration reduced serum IGFBP-3
whereas IGF-I administration increased the level of IGFBP-3 and IGF-I and
resulted in an increased body and kidney weight in adult female rats
The GH/IGF axis in the mouse kidney
Growth hormone (GH) is a protein hormone synthesized and secreted by
somatotroph cells within the anterior pituitary predominantly under regulation of
hypothalamic peptides, GH releasing hormone (GHRH) and somatostatin (SS) (1-3)
(Figure 1). Further, production of GH is modulated by various neuronal and endocrine
factors. Genetic predisposition, nutrition, stress, exercise and sleep pattern are all
known to influence GH release. GH itself can regulate its own production at the
hypothalamic level, where it modulates the release of GHRH and SS (2), and at
pituitary level where it has autocrine inhibitory effect on secretion from the
somatotroph (4) (Figure 1). GH secretion is also regulated through a negative
feedback loop involving the principal mediator of GH activity, insulin-like growth factor
(IGF-I) (5) (Figure 1). High serum levels of IGF-I are believed to decrease GH
secretion not only by directly suppressing the somatotroph, but also by stimulating
release of somatostatin from the hypothalamus. However, recent results from liverspecific
IGF-I KO mouse suggest that IGF-I feedback regulates GH secretion at the
pituitary rather than at the hypothalamic level (6). Integration of all the factors that
affect GH synthesis and secretion results in a pulsatile pattern of release
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