Postnatal Growth Responses to Insulin-Like Growth Factor I in Insulin Receptor Substrate-1-Deficient Mice1

Organ weight was compared in adult mice with deletion of one (IRS-1−/+) or both (IRS-1−/−) copies of the insulin receptor substrate-1 (IRS-1) gene and IRS-1+/+ littermates. IRS-1−/+ mice showed modest reductions in weight of most organs in proportion to a decrease in body weight. IRS-1−/− mice showe...

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Veröffentlicht in:Endocrinology (Philadelphia) 1999-12, Vol.140 (12), p.5478-5487
Hauptverfasser: Pete, Gina, Fuller, C. Randall, Oldham, Jenny M, Smith, Dani R, D’Ercole, A. Joseph, Kahn, C. Ronald, Lund, P. Kay
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Organ weight was compared in adult mice with deletion of one (IRS-1−/+) or both (IRS-1−/−) copies of the insulin receptor substrate-1 (IRS-1) gene and IRS-1+/+ littermates. IRS-1−/+ mice showed modest reductions in weight of most organs in proportion to a decrease in body weight. IRS-1−/− mice showed major reductions in weight of heart, liver, and spleen that were directly proportional to a decrease in body weight. In IRS-1−/− mice, kidney and particularly small intestine and brain exhibited proportionately smaller weight reductions, and gastrocnemius muscle showed a proportionately greater weight reduction than the decrease in body weight. Growth deficits in IRS-1−/− mice could reflect impaired actions of multiple hormones or cytokines that activate IRS-1. To assess the requirement for IRS-1 in insulin-like growth factor I (IGF-I)-dependent postnatal growth, IRS-1−/+ mice were cross-bred with mice that widely overexpress a human IGF-I transgene (IGF+) to generate IGF+ and wild-type mice on an IRS-1+/+, IRS-1−/+, and IRS-1−/− background. IGF-I overexpression increased body weight and weight of brain, small intestine, kidney, spleen, heart, and gastrocnemius muscle in IRS-1+/+ mice. IGF-I overexpression could not completely reverse the body growth retardation in IRS-1−/− mice. Absolute or partial IRS-1 deficiency impaired IGF-I-induced body overgrowth more in females than in males. In males and females, IGF-I stimulated similar overgrowth of brain regardless of IRS-1 status, and intestine and spleen showed dose dependence on IRS-1 for IGF-I-induced growth. IGF-I-induced growth of gastrocnemius muscle had an absolute requirement for IRS-1. IGF-I-induced growth of kidney and heart was impaired by IRS-1 deficiency only in females. In vivo, therefore, most organs do not require IRS-1 for IGF-I-induced growth and can use alternate signaling molecules to mediate IGF-I action. Other organs, such as gastrocnemius muscle, require IRS-1 for IGF-I-induced growth in vivo.
ISSN:0013-7227
1945-7170
DOI:10.1210/endo.140.12.7219