Zapf J
Department of Internal Medicine, University Hospital, Zürich, Switzerland.
Mol Cell Endocrinol. 1998 May 25;140(1-2):143-9. doi: 10.1016/s0303-7207(98)00042-2.
Two animal models, the hypophysectomized (hypox) and the streptozotocin-diabetic rat, both of which are GH-deficient, were used to study the effects of infused IGF I and its molecular size distribution in serum, and to investigate whether GH and IGF I act identically on growth plate chondrocyte maturation. In hypox rats. IGF I (300 microg/rat per day) stimulated body weight gain, total growth plate height and longitudinal growth rate, although less than GH (200 mU/rat per day), and mimicked the effect of GH at all stages of chondrocyte differentiation. including stem cells. Infused IGF I was nearly exclusively found in a < 100 kDa IGF binding protein (IGFBP) complex, whereas free IGF I was barely detectable. These findings argue against the 'dual effector theory' in vivo which postulates priming of the stem cells by GH before IGF I stimulates proliferation. They also suggest that IGF I bound to the < 100 kDa IGFBP complex is bioavailable for growth. In diabetic rats infused with 2.5 mg/rat per day of IGF I, body weight, tibial epiphyseal width and accumulated bone growth increased dramatically despite persisting hyperglycemia. Insulin infusion (2.5 U/rat per day), which nearly normalized elevated blood sugar values, raised endogenous IGF I serum levels and stimulated growth parameters to a similar extent as IGF I, in line with a similar distribution of the infused exogenous and the insulin-induced endogenous IGF I between the free and the < 100 kDa-bound form. Since GH secretion is inhibited in diabetic rats and the animals are resistant to GH action, these results, like those in hypox rats, demonstrate that IGF I can act on growth independently of GH. Because insulin restores GH secretion and the responsiveness of the liver to GH in diabetic rats, one may conclude that insulin acts on growth of diabetic rats mainly via restoration of the GH/IGF I axis.
采用两种动物模型,即垂体切除(hypox)大鼠和链脲佐菌素诱导的糖尿病大鼠,二者均存在生长激素(GH)缺乏,用于研究输注胰岛素样生长因子I(IGF I)及其血清中的分子大小分布的影响,并探讨GH和IGF I对生长板软骨细胞成熟的作用是否相同。在hypox大鼠中,IGF I(每天300μg/只大鼠)刺激体重增加、生长板总高度和纵向生长速率,尽管作用小于GH(每天200mU/只大鼠),并且在软骨细胞分化的所有阶段(包括干细胞阶段)模拟了GH的作用。输注的IGF I几乎完全存在于<100kDa的胰岛素样生长因子结合蛋白(IGFBP)复合物中,而游离的IGF I几乎检测不到。这些发现与体内的“双效应器理论”相悖,该理论假定在IGF I刺激增殖之前,GH对干细胞进行启动作用。它们还表明,与<100kDa的IGFBP复合物结合的IGF I对生长具有生物活性。在每天输注2.5mg/只大鼠IGF I的糖尿病大鼠中,尽管血糖持续升高,但体重、胫骨骨骺宽度和累积骨生长显著增加。输注胰岛素(每天2.5U/只大鼠)使升高的血糖值几乎恢复正常,提高了内源性IGF I血清水平,并在相似程度上刺激生长参数,这与输注的外源性IGF I和胰岛素诱导的内源性IGF I在游离形式和<100kDa结合形式之间的相似分布一致。由于糖尿病大鼠的GH分泌受到抑制且动物对GH作用产生抵抗,这些结果与hypox大鼠的结果一样,表明IGF I可以独立于GH对生长发挥作用。因为胰岛素可恢复糖尿病大鼠的GH分泌以及肝脏对GH的反应性,所以可以得出结论,胰岛素主要通过恢复GH/IGF I轴来作用于糖尿病大鼠的生长。