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Discordant, organ-specific regulation of insulin-like growth factor-I messenger ribonucleic acid in insulin-deficient diabetes in rats

Catanese VM; Sciavolino PJ; Lango MN
Linear growth retardation is common in uncontrolled insulin-deficient diabetes, but individual organs such as kidney may hypertrophy. To explore whether this heterogeneity of response might be mediated by differential local insulin-like growth factor-I (IGF-I) gene regulation, we injected rats with ip saline, 65, 120, or 175 mg/kg streptozotocin (STZ). Diabetics were untreated or received daily insulin. Animals were killed 24, 48, or 72 h after documentation of diabetes, and liver, kidney, and lung messenger RNA (mRNA) content analyzed by solution hybridization/RNase protection assay. Untreated diabetics had 10- to 100-fold reductions in hepatic IGF-I mRNA apparent as early as 24 h, and the magnitude of these changes varied directly with the severity of diabetes. In contrast, kidney IGF-I mRNA content increased by 400-500% at 24 h in untreated diabetics given 175 mg/kg STZ, and by 100-200% at 48 h in those given 120 mg/kg STZ, with return to control levels by 72 h. Renal IGF-I mRNA levels actually decreased by 250-350% at 24 h in rats injected with 65 mg/kg STZ, returning to supranormal values by 72 h. These results suggest that severity and/or duration of the metabolic abnormality qualitatively and quantitatively affect this response in the kidney. Liver and kidney IGF-I mRNA levels approached normal with insulin therapy and were similar to controls in rats which received STZ but did not develop diabetes. Lung IGF-I mRNA levels were minimally altered in all experimental groups. At the time point and STZ dosage at which liver IGF-I mRNA changes were most dramatic, little change in liver alpha-tubulin mRNA was noted. At the time point and STZ dosages at which kidney IGF-I mRNA induction was most dramatic, renal IGF-I receptor mRNA was only minimally changed, and renal alpha-tubulin mRNA was modestly reduced. In summary: 1) hepatic IGF-I mRNAs are dramatically reduced, and renal IGF-I mRNAs are significantly increased soon after the onset of insulin-deficient diabetes in STZ-treated rats; 2) insulin therapy restores IGF-I mRNA levels toward normal; and 3) these changes in IGF-I mRNA content are specific and are not the result of hepatic or renal STZ toxicity. These data suggest that IGF-I gene expression is regulated in a discordant, organ-specific manner in diabetes, and that metabolic factors in addition to GH may differentially modulate the endocrine and paracrine effects of IGF-I on growth
PMID: 8425471
ISSN: 0013-7227
CID: 8455

INSULIN NEGATIVELY REGULATES PRETRANSLATIONAL AND POSTTRANSLATIONAL RENAL EXPRESSION OF INSULIN-LIKE GROWTH-FACTOR BINDING PROTEIN-1 [Meeting Abstract]

KAUFMAN, CR; CATANESE, VM
ISI:A1992JQ52100070
ISSN: 0009-9279
CID: 51877

EFFECT OF DIABETES ON RENAL EXPRESSION OF INSULIN-LIKE GROWTH-FACTOR BINDING-PROTEINS [Meeting Abstract]

KAUFMAN, CR; CATANESE, VM
ISI:A1992HN74100486
ISSN: 0009-9279
CID: 51981

HEMODYNAMIC MODULATION OF VENTRICULAR INSULIN-LIKE GROWTH FACTOR-I GENE-EXPRESSION [Meeting Abstract]

DONOHUE, TJ; LANGO, M; BENSTEIN, JA; DWORKIN, LD; CATANESE, VM
ISI:A1991FH32300066
ISSN: 0009-9279
CID: 51602

INDUCTION OF CARDIAC INSULIN-LIKE GROWTH FACTOR-I MESSENGER-RNA PRECEDES VENTRICULAR HYPERTROPHY IN RESPONSE TO PRESSURE OVERLOAD [Meeting Abstract]

Donohue, TJ; Benstein, JA; Dworkin, LD; Slater, WR; Catanese, VM
ISI:A1990EC76403029
ISSN: 0009-7322
CID: 31914

SEQUENTIAL INDUCTION OF CARDIAC C-MYC AND INSULIN-LIKE GROWTH FACTOR-I GENES PRECEDES VENTRICULAR HYPERTROPHY IN RESPONSE TO PRESSURE OVERLOAD [Meeting Abstract]

Donohue, TJ; Benstein, JA; Dworkin, LD; Slater, WR; Catanese, VM
ISI:A1990EA23500024
ISSN: 0009-9279
CID: 31920

Non-lactogenic effects of growth hormone on growth and insulin-like growth factor-I messenger ribonucleic acid of rat mammary gland

Kleinberg DL; Ruan W; Catanese V; Newman CB; Feldman M
In contrast to established dogma that PRL is central in mammary development, and GH mimics PRL in affecting growth because of structural similarities, we found that both hGH, which is lactogenic, and rGH, which is non-lactogenic, were significantly more potent than hPRL and rPRL in stimulating mammary growth in rats. Additionally, hGH was more potent than hPRL in increasing mammary IGF-I mRNA content. These data indicate that GH has separate effects on parameters of mammary gland growth, suggesting an independent role for GH in mammary growth
PMID: 2351118
ISSN: 0013-7227
CID: 18392

SEQUENTIAL INDUCTION OF CARDIAC C-MYC AND INSULIN-LIKE GROWTH FACTOR-I GENE-EXPRESSION IN RESPONSE TO ELEVATED LEFT- VENTRICULAR AFTERLOAD [Meeting Abstract]

Donohue, TJ; Dworkin, LD; Slater, W; Catanese, VM
ISI:A1990CZ24400079
ISSN: 0009-9279
CID: 31952

RENAL INSULIN-LIKE GROWTH FACTOR-I GENE-EXPRESSION IS INCREASED AFTER UNILATERAL NEPHRECTOMY - RELATIONSHIP TO GLOMERULAR INJURY [Meeting Abstract]

Benstein, JA; Koretz, K; Dworkin, LD; Catanese, VM
ISI:A1990CZ24400573
ISSN: 0009-9279
CID: 31960

REGULATION OF INSULIN-LIKE GROWTH FACTOR-I GENE-EXPRESSION IN INSULIN-DEFICIENT DIABETES [Meeting Abstract]

Catanese, VM
ISI:A1989U004401255
ISSN: 0009-9279
CID: 31701