Department of Biology, North Carolina State University , Raleigh, NC , USA.
Front Endocrinol (Lausanne). 2013 Jul 1;4:74. doi: 10.3389/fendo.2013.00074. eCollection 2013.
Compensatory growth (CG) is a period of accelerated growth that occurs following the alleviation of growth-stunting conditions during which an organism can make up for lost growth opportunity and potentially catch up in size with non-stunted cohorts. Fish show a particularly robust capacity for the response and have been the focus of numerous studies that demonstrate their ability to compensate for periods of fasting once food is made available again. CG is characterized by an elevated growth rate resulting from enhanced feed intake, mitogen production, and feed conversion efficiency. Because little is known about the underlying mechanisms that drive the response, this review describes the sequential endocrine adaptations that lead to CG; namely during the precedent catabolic phase (fasting) that taps endogenous energy reserves, and the following hyperanabolic phase (refeeding) when accelerated growth occurs. In order to elicit a CG response, endogenous energy reserves must first be moderately depleted, which alters endocrine profiles that enhance appetite and growth potential. During this catabolic phase, elevated ghrelin and growth hormone (GH) production increase appetite and protein-sparing lipolysis, while insulin-like growth factors (IGFs) are suppressed, primarily due to hepatic GH resistance. During refeeding, temporal hyperphagia provides an influx of energy and metabolic substrates that are then allocated to somatic growth by resumed IGF signaling. Under the right conditions, refeeding results in hyperanabolism and a steepened growth trajectory relative to constantly fed controls. The response wanes as energy reserves are re-accumulated and homeostasis is restored. We ascribe possible roles for select appetite and growth-regulatory hormones in the context of the prerequisite of these catabolic and hyperanabolic phases of the CG response in teleosts, with emphasis on GH, IGFs, cortisol, somatostatin, neuropeptide Y, ghrelin, and leptin.
补偿性生长(CG)是指在缓解生长抑制条件后发生的加速生长时期,在此期间,生物体可以弥补失去的生长机会,并有可能在大小上赶上未受抑制的队列。鱼类表现出特别强大的反应能力,并且已经成为许多研究的焦点,这些研究表明它们有能力在再次获得食物时补偿禁食期。CG 的特征是生长率升高,这是由于饲料摄入量增加、有丝分裂原产生和饲料转化率提高所致。由于对驱动反应的潜在机制知之甚少,因此本综述描述了导致 CG 的连续内分泌适应;即在消耗内源性能量储备的先前分解代谢阶段(禁食)和随后的加速生长阶段(再喂养)。为了引起 CG 反应,必须首先适度耗尽内源性能量储备,这会改变增强食欲和生长潜力的内分泌谱。在这个分解代谢阶段,升高的 ghrelin 和生长激素(GH)的产生增加了食欲和蛋白质保护脂肪分解,而胰岛素样生长因子(IGFs)受到抑制,主要是由于肝脏 GH 抵抗。在再喂养期间,短暂的暴食提供了能量和代谢底物的流入,然后通过恢复 IGF 信号将其分配给体细胞生长。在适当的条件下,再喂养会导致hyperanabolism 和相对于持续喂养对照的陡峭生长轨迹。随着能量储备的重新积累和内稳态的恢复,反应会减弱。我们将在涉及鱼类 CG 反应的分解代谢和 hyperanabolic 阶段的先决条件下,为选定的食欲和生长调节激素赋予可能的作用,重点是 GH、IGFs、皮质醇、生长抑素、神经肽 Y、ghrelin 和瘦素。