Regulation of pituitary insulin-like growth factor-I messenger ribonucleic acid levels in rats harboring somatomammotropic tumors: implications for growth hormone autoregulation. Academic Article uri icon

Overview

abstract

  • Insulin-like growth factor-I (IGF-I) is produced in multiple tissues and is believed to exert its action in a paracrine or autocrine fashion. We have investigated the GH dependency of tissue IGF-I gene expression in rats harboring implanted somatomammotropic tumors. Circulating GH and radioimmunoassayable IGF-I levels were markedly elevated in these animals. Hepatic IGF-I messenger RNA (mRNA) transcripts were induced about 5-fold in the tumor-bearing rats relative to control animals, and about 50-fold relative to the hypophysectomized liver IGF-I mRNA. IGF-I mRNA content was also modestly induced in the heart, muscle, and kidney of the tumor-bearing animals. IGF-I mRNA transcripts of 8.0, 6.2, 3.8, 2.4, 1.3, and 1.0 kilobases were markedly stimulated in the pituitaries of the GH-tumor bearing rats relative to control pituitaries. Pituitary IGF-I mRNA induction was maximal between 2 and 6 weeks after tumor implantation, a time at which circulating GH levels were also increasing sharply. As previously reported, pituitary GH mRNA was inhibited in tumor-bearing rats. The stimulation of pituitary IGF-I gene expression in these animals, therefore, appears to be dependent on circulating, and not local, pituitary GH concentrations. These data support the GH dependency of pituitary IGF-I gene expression. IGF-I is known to decrease GH production in vitro. High circulating levels of IGF-I present in these animals may account for the observed inhibition of GH gene expression. These data raise the alternative possibility that induction of locally produced IGF-I may contribute to this phenomenon.

publication date

  • May 1, 1988

Research

keywords

  • Insulin-Like Growth Factor I
  • Pituitary Gland
  • Pituitary Neoplasms
  • RNA, Messenger
  • Somatomedins

Identity

Scopus Document Identifier

  • 0023891379

PubMed ID

  • 3359980

Additional Document Info

volume

  • 122

issue

  • 5