Pancreatic Islet-Specific Expression of an Insulin-Like Growth Factor-I Transgene Compensates Islet Cell Growth in Growth Hormone Receptor Gene-Deficient Mice
Both GH and IGF-I stimulate islet cell growth, inhibit cell apoptosis, and regulate insulin biosynthesis and secretion. GH receptor gene deficiency (GHR−/−) caused diminished pancreatic islet cell mass and serum insulin level and elevated insulin sensitivity. Because IGF-I gene expression was nearly...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Endocrinology (Philadelphia) 2005-06, Vol.146 (6), p.2602-2609 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Both GH and IGF-I stimulate islet cell growth, inhibit cell apoptosis, and regulate insulin biosynthesis and secretion. GH receptor gene deficiency (GHR−/−) caused diminished pancreatic islet cell mass and serum insulin level and elevated insulin sensitivity. Because IGF-I gene expression was nearly abolished in these mice, we sought to determine whether that had caused the islet defects. To restore IGF-I level, we have generated transgenic mice that express rat IGF-I cDNA under the direction of rat insulin promoter 1 (RIP-IGF). Using RNase protection assay and immunohistochemistry, the IGF-I transgene expression was revealed specifically in pancreatic islets of the RIP-IGF mice, which exhibited normal growth and development and possess no abnormalities in glucose homeostasis, insulin production, and islet cell mass. GHR−/− mice exhibited 50% reduction in the ratio of islet cell mass to body weight and increased insulin sensitivity but impaired glucose tolerance. Compared with GHR−/− alone, IGF-I overexpression on a GHR−/− background caused no change in the diminished blood glucose and serum insulin levels, pancreatic insulin contents, and insulin tolerance but improved glucose tolerance and insulin secretion. Remarkably, islet-specific overexpression of IGF-I gene in GHR−/− mice restored islet cell mass, at least partially through cell hypertrophy. Interestingly, double-transgenic male mice demonstrated a transient rescue in growth rates vs. GHR−/− alone, at 2–3 months of age. Our results suggest that IGF-I deficiency is part of the underlying mechanism of diminished islet growth in GHR−/− mice and are consistent with the notion that IGF-I mediates GH-induced islet cell growth. |
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ISSN: | 0013-7227 1945-7170 |
DOI: | 10.1210/en.2004-1203 |