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Administration of insulin-like growth factor-I, but not growth hormone, increases maternal weight gain in late pregnancy without affecting fetal or placental growth

journal contribution
posted on 1991-09-01, 00:00 authored by S E Gargosky, Julie OwensJulie Owens, P E Walton, P C Owens, J C Wallace, F J Ballard
During late pregnancy in the rat, circulating levels of insulin-like growth factor-I (IGF-I) and some IGF-binding proteins (IGFBP) decline. The aim of the present study was to determine the relationship of GH to circulating IGF and IGFBP in the late-pregnant rat and to examine the effects on maternal, fetal and placental growth of preventing the decline in serum IGF and IGFBP concentrations. During the first 9 days of pregnancy, IGF-I concentrations increased from 340 to 500 micrograms/l. Recombinant human (rh) GH at 2.4 mg/kg per day and rhIGF-I at 1.4 mg/kg per day were infused into pregnant rats via osmotic mini pumps during the second half of pregnancy. After pump implantation on day 11 of pregnancy, only IGF-I infusion significantly increased circulating IGF-I. A maximum IGF-I concentration of 907 micrograms/l was measured on day 14 during treatment with IGF-I, after which the serum concentration decreased to 510 micrograms/l by day 20 of pregnancy. The serum IGFBPs were examined using a Western ligand blot technique. Infusion of neither GH nor IGF-I returned the IGFBPs to non-pregnant levels. Administration of IGF-I slightly increased IGFBP-3 and a smaller 32 kDa IGFBP at days 17 and 20 of pregnancy. Neither fetal nor placental weight was significantly different between treatment groups. However, administration of IGF-I significantly increased maternal weight gain during the 10-day treatment period.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)

History

Journal

Journal of endocrinology

Volume

130

Issue

3

Pagination

395 - 400

Publisher

bioscientifica

Location

Bradley Stok, Eng.

ISSN

0022-0795

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1.1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

1991, Journal of Endocrinology Ltd