The interrelationship between and the regulation of hepatic growth hormone receptors and circulating GH binding protein in the pig

Abstract
We evaluated the interrelationship between, and regulation of, the hepatic growth hormone receptor and serum GH binding protein (GH BP) in pigs treated with recombinant porcine growth hormone (rpGH). Infant and pubertal male pigs (N = 5 per group) received either rpGH 0.15 mg/kg daily or diluent intramuscularly for 12 days. Somatic growth, serum IGF-I and GH BP and [125I]bovine GH (bGH) binding to MgCl2-treated hepatic membrane homogenates were examined. Marked age-related increases were seen in serum GH BP (p125I]bGH binding to hepatic membranes (p125I]bGH binding to hepatic membranes was also increased by rpGH treatment (p125I]bGH membrane capacity (r=0.82, p125]bGH membrane binding capacity (r = 0.91, p< 0.001). These observations suggest that serum GH BP levels reflect major changes of hepatic GH receptor status. In addition, the present study demonstrates that the hepatic GH receptor can be induced by GH in the infant pig, despite a developmentally low GH receptor population at this age, suggesting potential efficacy of GH at earlier ages than generally considered.

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