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# Growth.pdf
**OCR Transcript**
- Pages: 38
- OCR Engine: pymupdf
- Quality Score: 1.00
---
## Page 1
2024-04-26
1
UNIVERSITY OF GOTHENBURG | SAHLGRENSKA ACADEMY
Body growth- effects by the
hypothalamus-pituitary
PROFESSOR SUZANNE L DICKSON
| INST. NEUROSCIENCE & PHYSIOLOGY | SUZANNE L DICKSON
1
UNIVERSITY OF GOTHENBURG | SAHLGRENSKA ACADEMY
Robert Wadlow (1918-1940)
| INST. NEUROSCIENCE & PHYSIOLOGY | SUZANNE L DICKSON
272 cm
1936 Class Photo
2
---
## Page 2
2024-04-26
2
UNIVERSITY OF GOTHENBURG | SAHLGRENSKA ACADEMY
• Body growth - general
• Body growth - endocrine regulation
• What are the effects of the GH-IGF-1 axis?
• How is the GH-IGF-1 axis regulated?
• What are the mechanisms of action of GH and IGF-1?
• What can go wrong with GH- IGF-1?
Content
| INST. NEUROSCIENCE & PHYSIOLOGY | SUZANNE L DICKSON
3
UNIVERSITY OF GOTHENBURG | SAHLGRENSKA ACADEMY
Ø Body growth - general
• Body growth - endocrine regulation
• What are the effects of the GH-IGF-1 axis?
• How is the GH-IGF-1 axis regulated?
• What are the mechanisms of action of GH and IGF-1?
• What can go wrong with GH- IGF-1?
Content
| INST. NEUROSCIENCE & PHYSIOLOGY | SUZANNE L DICKSON
4
---
## Page 3
2024-04-26
3
UNIVERSITY OF GOTHENBURG | SAHLGRENSKA ACADEMY
Organ growth (% of size at age 20)
| INST. NEUROSCIENCE & PHYSIOLOGY | SUZANNE L DICKSON
Size obtained
(as % adult size)
LYMPHOID
BRAIN & HEAD develop early
GENERAL eg skeleton, muscle
REPRODUCTIVE develop late -
puberty
Age (years)
5
UNIVERSITY OF GOTHENBURG | SAHLGRENSKA ACADEMY
• Genetic 80% of an individuals height is
genetically determined
• Environment: nutrition, illness, stress
- Food provides energy for growth but also vitamins
& minerals.
- Growth is a luxury spared in times of famine.
- Injury and disease stunt growth (catabolic state).
Factors that affect growth
| INST. NEUROSCIENCE & PHYSIOLOGY | SUZANNE L DICKSON
6
---
## Page 4
2024-04-26
4
UNIVERSITY OF GOTHENBURG | SAHLGRENSKA ACADEMY
• Genetic 80% of an individuals height is
genetically determined
• Environment: nutrition, illness, stress
Factors that affect growth
| INST. NEUROSCIENCE & PHYSIOLOGY | SUZANNE L DICKSON
Hormones:
growth hormone
insulin-like growth factor 1 and 2, insulin
thyroid hormones
androgens - estrogens
glucocorticoids inhibitory (catabolic)
7
UNIVERSITY OF GOTHENBURG | SAHLGRENSKA ACADEMY
• Growth is not continuous it is
episodic
• Periods of physiological rapid
growth
In infancy
In late puberty (just before
growth stops)
Growth in humans
| INST. NEUROSCIENCE & PHYSIOLOGY | SUZANNE L DICKSON
% adult height
age in years
INFANCY
CHILDHOOD
PUBERTY
5
10
15
20
100
75
50
25
8
---
## Page 5
2024-04-26
5
UNIVERSITY OF GOTHENBURG | SAHLGRENSKA ACADEMY
“Catch-up” growth: pathophysiological after illness or
food restriction
| INST. NEUROSCIENCE & PHYSIOLOGY | SUZANNE L DICKSON
Illness or
Food restriction
A Normal Growth
B Decline in growth
C Hyperanabolic phase
D Return to normal
growth rate
CG= catch-up growth
9
UNIVERSITY OF GOTHENBURG | SAHLGRENSKA ACADEMY
Catch-up growth in relation
to a population of children
| INST. NEUROSCIENCE & PHYSIOLOGY | SUZANNE L DICKSON
Illness
or fasting
period
Normal
Normal
5%
95%
Gaussian curve (any age)
50%
Recovery
From
illness
95%
5%
10
---
## Page 6
2024-04-26
6
UNIVERSITY OF GOTHENBURG | SAHLGRENSKA ACADEMY
Growth velocity in boys and girls
| INST. NEUROSCIENCE & PHYSIOLOGY | SUZANNE L DICKSON
5
10
15
20
25
0
0
2
4
6
8 10 12 14 16 18 20
Age in years
BOYS
GIRLS
Height
gain
(cm/yr)
Growth
spurt
Why are men taller?
11
UNIVERSITY OF GOTHENBURG | SAHLGRENSKA ACADEMY
• Body growth - general
Ø Body growth - endocrine regulation
• What are the effects of the GH-IGF-1 axis?
• How is the GH-IGF-1 axis regulated?
• What are the mechanisms of action of GH and IGF-1?
• What can go wrong with GH- IGF-1?
Content
| INST. NEUROSCIENCE & PHYSIOLOGY | SUZANNE L DICKSON
12
---
## Page 7
2024-04-26
7
UNIVERSITY OF GOTHENBURG | SAHLGRENSKA ACADEMY
Endocrine control of postnatal growth
5
10
15
20
25
0
0
2
4
6
8 10 12 14 16 18 20
Age in years
BOYS
GIRLS
Height
gain
(cm/yr)
Thyroid hormones
Growth hormone à ↑IGF-1
Gonadal steroids
Estradiol
Testosterone à Estradiol
(à ERa à ↑ GH à ↑ IGF-1)
| INST. NEUROSCIENCE & PHYSIOLOGY | SUZANNE L DICKSON
13
UNIVERSITY OF GOTHENBURG | SAHLGRENSKA ACADEMY
Induction of growth plate closure by steroids in men
and women
| INST. NEUROSCIENCE & PHYSIOLOGY | SUZANNE L DICKSON
Aromatase
E2
TàE2
Same hormones that cause
the growth spurt, but later!
Females: Estradiol acts on ERa in
growth plate.
Males:
Testosterone à Estradiol
acts on ERa in growth plate.
14
---
## Page 8
2024-04-26
8
UNIVERSITY OF GOTHENBURG | SAHLGRENSKA ACADEMY
• Responsible for the growth spurt at puberty
• Stimulate secretion of GH and IGF-1
• T is more anabolic à more pubertal growth in males.
• Body weight: T à ↑muscle mass & E à↑fat deposition.
• E more potent than T at level of growth plate
• E first stimulates the epiphyseal growth plate but then leads to its
closure.
Patients with precocious (early) puberty have short stature.
Androgens (T) and estrogens (E)
| INST. NEUROSCIENCE & PHYSIOLOGY | SUZANNE L DICKSON
15
UNIVERSITY OF GOTHENBURG | SAHLGRENSKA ACADEMY
u Nutrients (dose response)
u Insulin once beta cells have developed
u IGF-1
u IGF-2
u Thyroid hormone
u Not GH.
Endocrine control of prenatal growth
(trimester 2-3)
| INST. NEUROSCIENCE & PHYSIOLOGY | SUZANNE L DICKSON
16
---
## Page 9
2024-04-26
9
UNIVERSITY OF GOTHENBURG | SAHLGRENSKA ACADEMY
anterior pituitary GH-N, GH gene (somatotrophs) pulsatile
placenta - GH variant continuous, 3rd trimester, secretion to mother, not fetus,
may increase B-glucose and lipolysis in mother à more nutrients for fetus?
Growth hormone (GH)
| INST. NEUROSCIENCE & PHYSIOLOGY | SUZANNE L DICKSON
In addition 3 human placental
lactogen (hPL)=
human chorionsomatomammotropin
(hCG) genes
GH-N
(pit)
GH-V
(pla-
centa)
Mum
↑GH-Và
↓GH-N
hCG
Gene
clusters
Maternal
circulation
17
UNIVERSITY OF GOTHENBURG | SAHLGRENSKA ACADEMY
Human GH protein (192 amino acids, 4 a-helices)
must be injected (from GH-N gene).
Without GH à proportional dwarf - 110 cm.
GH tumour: Giant if not adult. 270 cm. à Wide dose
response! (maybe also for IGF-1.)
Growth hormone therapy
| INST. NEUROSCIENCE & PHYSIOLOGY | SUZANNE L DICKSON
GH structure
18
---
## Page 10
2024-04-26
10
UNIVERSITY OF GOTHENBURG | SAHLGRENSKA ACADEMY
• Body growth - general
• Body growth - endocrine regulation
Ø What are the effects of the GH-IGF-1 axis?
• How is the GH-IGF-1 axis regulated?
• What are the mechanisms of action of GH and IGF-1?
• What can go wrong with GH- IGF-1?
Content
| INST. NEUROSCIENCE & PHYSIOLOGY | SUZANNE L DICKSON
19
UNIVERSITY OF GOTHENBURG | SAHLGRENSKA ACADEMY
What does GH do?
(One opnion)
| INST. NEUROSCIENCE & PHYSIOLOGY | SUZANNE L DICKSON
20
---
## Page 11
2024-04-26
11
UNIVERSITY OF GOTHENBURG | SAHLGRENSKA ACADEMY
What does GH do?
(One opnion)
| INST. NEUROSCIENCE & PHYSIOLOGY | SUZANNE L DICKSON
21
UNIVERSITY OF GOTHENBURG | SAHLGRENSKA ACADEMY
GH is anabolic, lipolytic and diabetogenic
Bone growth
direct
anabolic
Local IGF-1
production
Liver-derived
IGF1
?
¯ glucose uptake
(insulin resistance)
diabetogenic
glycogenolysis
­ blood glucose
GH
anabolic
­ Protein synthesis
­ Amino acid uptake
­ Lean body mass
FFAs
¯ fat mass
lipolytic
| INST. NEUROSCIENCE & PHYSIOLOGY | SUZANNE L DICKSON
22
---
## Page 12
2024-04-26
12
UNIVERSITY OF GOTHENBURG | SAHLGRENSKA ACADEMY
| INST. NEUROSCIENCE & PHYSIOLOGY | SUZANNE L DICKSON
GH-deficient patient
before GH therapy
GH-deficient patient
after 26 weeks
GH therapy
Bengtsson et al 1993
J. Clin. Endocrinol. Metab. 76:309
GH therapy reduces visceral adiposity in GH-deficiency
23
UNIVERSITY OF GOTHENBURG | SAHLGRENSKA ACADEMY
• hGH is banned in professional sport
• Usually taken for effects to reduce fat
rather than to build muscle.
• Health risks similar to those of patients
with acromegaly (see later).
• Common complaints: bloating, joint
inflammation, joint pain, diabetes-like
symptoms, injection site reactions, carpal
tunnel syndrome, breast development in
men, increased risk of cancers
GH abuse and doping in sport
| INST. NEUROSCIENCE & PHYSIOLOGY | SUZANNE L DICKSON
24
---
## Page 13
2024-04-26
13
UNIVERSITY OF GOTHENBURG | SAHLGRENSKA ACADEMY
• Body growth - general
• Body growth - endocrine regulation
• What are the effects of the GH-IGF-1 axis?
Ø How is the GH-IGF-1 axis regulated?
• What are the mechanisms of action of GH and IGF-1?
• What can go wrong with GH- IGF-1?
Content
| INST. NEUROSCIENCE & PHYSIOLOGY | SUZANNE L DICKSON
25
UNIVERSITY OF GOTHENBURG | SAHLGRENSKA ACADEMY
Physiological control of GH secretion
GH
Exercise
Fasting
Sleep
Aging
Stress
Arginine
Lipids
GH/IGF-1
Glucose
+
+
+
+
_
_
_
_
+
Gonadal
steroids
+
| INST. NEUROSCIENCE & PHYSIOLOGY | SUZANNE L DICKSON
ghrelin +
Cortisol
_
26
---
## Page 14
2024-04-26
14
UNIVERSITY OF GOTHENBURG | SAHLGRENSKA ACADEMY
Control of GH secretion
| INST. NEUROSCIENCE & PHYSIOLOGY | SUZANNE L DICKSON
27
UNIVERSITY OF GOTHENBURG | SAHLGRENSKA ACADEMY
Nutrient control of GH secretion in relation to GH effects
| INST. NEUROSCIENCE & PHYSIOLOGY | SUZANNE L DICKSON
Amino acids
(Arginine)
Lipids (FFA)
Glucose
GH
_
+
+
+
_
_
Pituitary
anabolic
lypolytic
diabetogenic
28
---
## Page 15
2024-04-26
15
UNIVERSITY OF GOTHENBURG | SAHLGRENSKA ACADEMY
Implications of pulsatile GH
| INST. NEUROSCIENCE & PHYSIOLOGY | SUZANNE L DICKSON
Time
GH levels
GH producing
tumor
Normal GH
pattern
GH deficiency
X
X
X
Single GH blood samples
not good enough
How to distinguish?
• 24 h GH pattern
(golden standard)
• Serum IGF-1 as marker
of mean 24 h GH
• Stimulators or inhibitors
X
29
UNIVERSITY OF GOTHENBURG | SAHLGRENSKA ACADEMY
Effect of arginine or insulin on plasma GH
| INST. NEUROSCIENCE & PHYSIOLOGY | SUZANNE L DICKSON
Arginine & insulin can
be used as
provocactive tests
for GH release
Arg/
insulin
hGH µg/ml
100
80
60
40
20
0
-10 0
30
60
90
120
Time (minutes)
Normal
GH deficient
30
---
## Page 16
2024-04-26
16
UNIVERSITY OF GOTHENBURG | SAHLGRENSKA ACADEMY
Glucose tolerance test
| INST. NEUROSCIENCE & PHYSIOLOGY | SUZANNE L DICKSON
Glucose
0
2
4
Hours
Normal
Acromegaly (nonresponsive to glucose)
35
6
3
0
GH
mU/ml
31
UNIVERSITY OF GOTHENBURG | SAHLGRENSKA ACADEMY
GH secretion is increased by gonadal steroids during
the growth spurt and then declines
| INST. NEUROSCIENCE & PHYSIOLOGY | SUZANNE L DICKSON
32
---
## Page 17
2024-04-26
17
UNIVERSITY OF GOTHENBURG | SAHLGRENSKA ACADEMY
| INST. NEUROSCIENCE & PHYSIOLOGY | SUZANNE L DICKSON
Clock time
SLEEP
STAGE
Plasma
GH µg/l
Clock time
SWS
SWS = slow
wave sleep
GH secretion during sleep
| INST. NEUROSCIENCE & PHYSIOLOGY | SUZANNE L DICKSON
33
UNIVERSITY OF GOTHENBURG | SAHLGRENSKA ACADEMY
Fasting increases GH
secretion in man
| INST. NEUROSCIENCE & PHYSIOLOGY | SUZANNE L DICKSON
Effects:
•Keep B-glucose up
•Lipolysis
•Does NOT increase growth
Bergendahl et al, 1999
34
---
## Page 18
2024-04-26
18
UNIVERSITY OF GOTHENBURG | SAHLGRENSKA ACADEMY
GH, IGF-1 and fasting
| INST. NEUROSCIENCE & PHYSIOLOGY | SUZANNE L DICKSON
IGF-1 stimulated by GH and Nutrition (partly via insulin).
FASTING
­
GH
­ B-glucose
­ Lipolysis
Fasting blocks GH effects
on body growth and IGF-1
à Appropriate response
to fasting
¯ IGF-1
¯ « Body growth
Needed for IGF-1 synthesis:
GH and food!
35
UNIVERSITY OF GOTHENBURG | SAHLGRENSKA ACADEMY
Somatotrophs: GHRH and somatostatin regulate GH
synthesis & release + cell replication
| INST. NEUROSCIENCE & PHYSIOLOGY | SUZANNE L DICKSON
P
CREB
CREB
PKA
cAMP
Somatostatin
GHRH
AC
+
-
Pituitary
somatotroph
2 GH Secretion
3 Proliferation
1 GH synthesis
Pit-1
Pit-1
GH
GH
G-prot
Pit1 is a pituitary-specific
transcription factor that is
essential for the
development of
somatotrophs (&
lactotrophs & thyrotrophs).
36
---
## Page 19
2024-04-26
19
UNIVERSITY OF GOTHENBURG | SAHLGRENSKA ACADEMY
• It is a peptide with a fatty acid group
• Ghrelin treatment stimulates GH release (and food intake)
• Most mice with disrupted ghrelin signalling are not “skinny
dwarfs” although certain models do have a mild phenotype.
• Ghrelin is mainly produced by the empty stomach between
meals
Ghrelin has 2 main roles: 1) ­ food intake and 2) ­ GH
release.
| INST. NEUROSCIENCE & PHYSIOLOGY | SUZANNE L DICKSON
Ghrelin receptors: In GHRH (growth)
and NPY (food intake) neurons
in arcuate nucleus (ARC)
37
UNIVERSITY OF GOTHENBURG | SAHLGRENSKA ACADEMY
Non-Hypothalamic Brain Areas
-
Taste sensation
-
Reward behaviour
-
Olfaction & sniffing
-
Learning & Memory
-
Depression
-
Sleep/wake rhythm
-
Neuroprotection
Sympathetic nervous system
- SNS activity ¯
BAT
- Thermogenesis ¯
Heart
- Cardiac output ­
- Cardiac contractility ­
- Vasodilatation ­
Stomach
- Gastric emptying­
- Gastric motility­
- Gastric acid secretion ­
Pituitary
- GH ­
Ghrelin directly stimulates
growth hormone release from
the anterior pituitary.
It also activates GHRH*
neurones in the hypothalamus.
GHRH and ghrelin act
synergistically to increase GH
secretion.
Pituitar
Hypothalamus
- GHRH ­
*Growth hormone-releasing hormone
Physiological effects of ghrelin: GH release
| INST. NEUROSCIENCE & PHYSIOLOGY | SUZANNE L DICKSON
38
---
## Page 20
2024-04-26
20
UNIVERSITY OF GOTHENBURG | SAHLGRENSKA ACADEMY
Ø Synthetic peptide and non-peptides that
release GH e.g. GH-releasing peptide 6
(GHRP-6), MK-0677, ipamorelin, hexarelin.
(1980s)
Ø NOTE: These ligands are now known to be
ghrelin mimetics. Discovered before ghrelin
or its receptor.
Ø Amplify GH release induced by GHRH
Ø Therapeutic potential - but have not become
prescribed drugs
-
for treating certain forms of GH
deficiency (when somatotrphs intact) or
-
for enhancing GH secretion when it
could have beneficial effects e.g. in the
elderly?
GH release
Placebo
0.1 ug/kg GHRP
1.0 ug/kg GHRP
1.0 ug/kg GHRH
0.1 ug/kg GHRP plus 1 ug/kg GHRH
From Bowers et al., 1990, J JCEM, 70: 975-982.
GH secretagogues (ghrelin mimetics) 1980s-1990s
| INST. NEUROSCIENCE & PHYSIOLOGY | SUZANNE L DICKSON
39
UNIVERSITY OF GOTHENBURG | SAHLGRENSKA ACADEMY
Veldhuis JD et al., 2008, JCEM, 93:3597-603.
Ghrelin (like GHRPs) amplifies GH secretion in healthy
subjects
| INST. NEUROSCIENCE & PHYSIOLOGY | SUZANNE L DICKSON
40
---
## Page 21
2024-04-26
21
UNIVERSITY OF GOTHENBURG | SAHLGRENSKA ACADEMY
Pantel et al., 2006, JCI, 116:760
Loss of constitutive activity of the growth
hormone secretagogue receptor in familial short
stature
Whereas several clinical studies support a role of
ghrelin in regulation growth and height, mice lacking
ghrelin or its receptor mostly do not have growth
abnormalities.
We do not know the role of ghrelin in GH physiology
it could be important to promote GH release during
fasting (and rescue blood glucose).
Sun et al Mol Cell Biol. 2003;23:7973-81.
Pfluger et al Am J Physiol Gastrointest Liver
Physiol. 2008;294:G610-8
Peris-Sampedro F Mol Metab 2021 13: 1301
Zhao et al., PNAS, 2010;107:7467-72
Those in
red support
a role
in growth
| INST. NEUROSCIENCE & PHYSIOLOGY | SUZANNE L DICKSON
Not clear that ghrelin is important for growth
41
UNIVERSITY OF GOTHENBURG | SAHLGRENSKA ACADEMY
| INST. NEUROSCIENCE & PHYSIOLOGY | SUZANNE L DICKSON
Ghrelin mimetics tested in clinical trials
Many linked to GH release!
42
---
## Page 22
2024-04-26
22
UNIVERSITY OF GOTHENBURG | SAHLGRENSKA ACADEMY
• Body growth - general
• Body growth - endocrine regulation
• What are the effects of the GH-IGF-1 axis?
• How is the GH-IGF-1 axis regulated?
Ø What are the mechanisms of action of GH and IGF-1?
• What can go wrong with GH- IGF-1?
Content
| INST. NEUROSCIENCE & PHYSIOLOGY | SUZANNE L DICKSON
43
UNIVERSITY OF GOTHENBURG | SAHLGRENSKA ACADEMY
Endochondral
growth
Calcifying
Hypertrophic
Proliferative
Geminal
Chondrocytes
Epiphyseal
plate
Oestrogens induce closure
of the growth plate via Erα, such that no further
proliferation or hypertrophy is possible.
Growth of long bones before epiphyseal plate closure
| INST. NEUROSCIENCE & PHYSIOLOGY | SUZANNE L DICKSON
44
---
## Page 23
2024-04-26
23
UNIVERSITY OF GOTHENBURG | SAHLGRENSKA ACADEMY
GH actions to stimulate bone
growth are mediated by
insulin-like growth factor 1
(IGF-1), produced by the liver.
IGF-1 - previously called
somatomedin C.
Salmon & Daughaday, 1957
GH
IGF-1
Somatomedin (IGF-1) hypothesis of GH action on bone
| INST. NEUROSCIENCE & PHYSIOLOGY | SUZANNE L DICKSON
45
UNIVERSITY OF GOTHENBURG | SAHLGRENSKA ACADEMY
GH acts locally within the
epiphyseal plate to promote
growth. No effect via liver IGF-1
on contralateral leg
Direct action of GH?
Locally produced IGF-1
needed
GH
NaCl
Experiment:
Administration of GH to growth
plate of one leg.
Olle Isakssson and coworkers, Science 1982
Challenge to the somatomedin hypothesis - 1
| INST. NEUROSCIENCE & PHYSIOLOGY | SUZANNE L DICKSON
46
---
## Page 24
2024-04-26
24
UNIVERSITY OF GOTHENBURG | SAHLGRENSKA ACADEMY
GH plus
IGF antiserum
NaCl
Additional Experiment:
IGF-1 antiserum (removes IGF-1)
+ GH to growth plate of one leg.
Result: No increase in growth of
injected leg.
Conclusion: GH actions require
the presence of IGF-1.
IGF-1 may be produced locally.
Challenge to the somatomedin hypothesis - 2
| INST. NEUROSCIENCE & PHYSIOLOGY | SUZANNE L DICKSON
47
UNIVERSITY OF GOTHENBURG | SAHLGRENSKA ACADEMY
0
10
20
30
40
50
0
8
12
16
20
24
Liver IGF-1 knockout
Control
Days after induction of knockout
Body
Weight
(g)
Normal body growth
in liver-specific IGF-
1-knockout mice.
àLiver-derived IGF-1
may not be
important for growth.
Sjögren K, Ohlsson C
et al, PNAS 1999
Challenge to the somatomedin hypothesis - 3
| INST. NEUROSCIENCE & PHYSIOLOGY | SUZANNE L DICKSON
48
---
## Page 25
2024-04-26
25
UNIVERSITY OF GOTHENBURG | SAHLGRENSKA ACADEMY
The local
actions of
GH within
the growth
plate
require the
presence of
IGF-1
Green et al, 1985
Maturing
chondrocytes
IGF1
IGF1
Clonal expansion
Early chondrocyte
IGF1 mRNA
Epiphyseal
growth
plate
GH
GH-R
Differentiation
Prechondrocyte
GH
Long bone
Needed for growth:
1. Direct GH effect.
and
2. IGF-1 (liver or local)
IGF-1 cannot replace
GH if GH deficient.
GH no effect in IGF-1
knockout mice.
| INST. NEUROSCIENCE & PHYSIOLOGY | SUZANNE L DICKSON
Modified somatomedin (IGF-1) hypothesis
49
UNIVERSITY OF GOTHENBURG | SAHLGRENSKA ACADEMY
GH actions to stimulate
bone growth are direct on
the bone.
The effects are partly
mediated by local IGF-1.
GH
IGF-1
GH
IGF-1
| INST. NEUROSCIENCE & PHYSIOLOGY | SUZANNE L DICKSON
Revised GH action on bone
50
---
## Page 26
2024-04-26
26
UNIVERSITY OF GOTHENBURG | SAHLGRENSKA ACADEMY
GH receptor dimerization for biological effect
1
2
inactive
1
2
active
1
2
GH antagonist
(pegvisomant,
No proper dimerisation)
inactive
1
2
GH
GH
receptor
inactive
| INST. NEUROSCIENCE & PHYSIOLOGY | SUZANNE L DICKSON
51
UNIVERSITY OF GOTHENBURG | SAHLGRENSKA ACADEMY
GH Receptor signaling: active STAT dimer to nucleus
P
1
2
1
2
GH
GH
receptor
P
JAK2
P
Nucleus
Nucleus
STAT5b
P
Phosphotyrosine
binding domain
STAT : signal transducer and
activator of transcription
| INST. NEUROSCIENCE & PHYSIOLOGY | SUZANNE L DICKSON
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## Page 27
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UNIVERSITY OF GOTHENBURG | SAHLGRENSKA ACADEMY
Serum IGF-1 levels determine sizes of dog breeds
Polymorphism near IGF-I
gene associated with body
size of dog breeds
IGF-I
IGF-I
IGF-I
IGF-I
IGF-I
| INST. NEUROSCIENCE & PHYSIOLOGY | SUZANNE L DICKSON
53
UNIVERSITY OF GOTHENBURG | SAHLGRENSKA ACADEMY
Derek LeRoith NEJM 1997
Scavenger receptor?
The ligands bind mainly
to their own receptors ,
but also to others with
lower affinity
Insulin- and IGF-I receptors
à Biological signaling
IGF-II Receptors
à Scavenging of ligand
INSULIN
IGF-1
IGF-2
Metabolic
Actions
Growth &
Differentiation
?
Insulin receptor
IGF-1 receptor
Scavenger rec?
| INST. NEUROSCIENCE & PHYSIOLOGY | SUZANNE L DICKSON
Comparisons between IGF-1, IGF-2, and insulin
54
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## Page 28
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UNIVERSITY OF GOTHENBURG | SAHLGRENSKA ACADEMY
IGF-IIR
IGF-IR
Insulin-R
insulin
IGF-I
IGF-II
P
P
P
P
P
P
P
P
IGFBP-2
IGFBP-1
IGFBP-4
IGFBP-6
IGFBP-3
ALS
IGFBP-5
ALS
" "
IGFBP proteases
Courtesy of Dr Ricarda Granata
IGFBP-3 ALS (acid-labile
subunit) binds most of all
IGF-1 in serum.
These ”chop up”
binding proteins and
release IGF-1
| INST. NEUROSCIENCE & PHYSIOLOGY | SUZANNE L DICKSON
The insulin-like growth factor (IGF) system
55
UNIVERSITY OF GOTHENBURG | SAHLGRENSKA ACADEMY
IGF-1
ALS
IGF-BP3
IGF-1
Rec
ALS: “acid labile subunit”
(old term)
| INST. NEUROSCIENCE & PHYSIOLOGY | SUZANNE L DICKSON
Interactions between IGF-1, IGF-BP3, ALS and BP3
protease
BP3 protease
56
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## Page 29
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UNIVERSITY OF GOTHENBURG | SAHLGRENSKA ACADEMY
IGF-1 stimulates proliferation
IGF-1 inhibits apoptosis.
In epidemiologic studies: High S-IGF-1 predictor
of breast cancer, prostate cancer, colon cancer…
Low S-IGF-BP3 independent predictor of cancer.
PSA (IGF BP3 protease) a clinical marker of prostate cancer
On the other hand: IGF-1R blockers (e g teprotumumab) do not
decrease cancer.
IGF-1 is approved by FDA to increase growth in
small children, irrespective of cause. Caution.
| INST. NEUROSCIENCE & PHYSIOLOGY | SUZANNE L DICKSON
Beware of IGF-1? 1) Tumors
57
UNIVERSITY OF GOTHENBURG | SAHLGRENSKA ACADEMY
1/3 ↓ food
intake
↓GH effect
↓ IGF-1 &
insulin
?
Animals with ↓IGF-1 all live longer (15-30%!)
u
Partly starved animals (not monkeys?)
u
Growth mutants (GHRH-/- (Little) mice, ames dwarf
mice, GHR-/-, IGF-1+/- etc.)
Genetic
growth
defects
↑ Longevity
| INST. NEUROSCIENCE & PHYSIOLOGY | SUZANNE L DICKSON
Beware of IGF-1? 2) Longevity
58
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## Page 30
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UNIVERSITY OF GOTHENBURG | SAHLGRENSKA ACADEMY
Body weight
Longevity
| INST. NEUROSCIENCE & PHYSIOLOGY | SUZANNE L DICKSON
Smaller dogs live longer IGF-1 involved?
59
UNIVERSITY OF GOTHENBURG | SAHLGRENSKA ACADEMY
• Body growth - general
• Body growth - endocrine regulation
• What are the effects of the GH-IGF-1 axis?
• How is the GH-IGF-1 axis regulated?
• What are the mechanisms of action of GH and IGF-1?
Ø What can go wrong with GH- IGF-1?
Content
| INST. NEUROSCIENCE & PHYSIOLOGY | SUZANNE L DICKSON
60
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## Page 31
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UNIVERSITY OF GOTHENBURG | SAHLGRENSKA ACADEMY
Excessive GH production
in childhood, or before the
epiphyseal growth plates
have fused
Dose-response 110-270 cm!
Cause:
Pituitary tumour
that starts from a
somatotrophic cell.
| INST. NEUROSCIENCE & PHYSIOLOGY | SUZANNE L DICKSON
Gigantism
61
UNIVERSITY OF GOTHENBURG | SAHLGRENSKA ACADEMY
Excessive GH production
in adulthood after the
epiphyseal growth plates
have fused. Growth of
“the tips of the body”.
Cause:
Pituitary tumor that
starts from a
somatotrophic cell.
| INST. NEUROSCIENCE & PHYSIOLOGY | SUZANNE L DICKSON
Acromegaly
62
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## Page 32
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UNIVERSITY OF GOTHENBURG | SAHLGRENSKA ACADEMY
Large nose
Thick lips
Growth of
mandible
Prominent
cheek bones
Osteoarthritic
vertabral changes
Enlarged
hand &
feet
Visual field
defects
(bitemporal
hemianopia)
Hirsutism
Barrel chest
Excessive
sweating
Often caused by
Lack of GTPase
activity in G-protein
(see next slide)
| INST. NEUROSCIENCE & PHYSIOLOGY | SUZANNE L DICKSON
Clinical features of acromegaly
63
UNIVERSITY OF GOTHENBURG | SAHLGRENSKA ACADEMY
Arg201 in G-protein changed à
No dephosphorylisation by GTPase à No signal termination à
1 GH production, 2 GH release, 3 Somatotroph proliferation
Gs-
GTP
Gs-
GDP
GDP
GTP
P
GHRH receptor
X
Adenylate
cyclase
­cAMP
Active
Inactive
+
40% of acromegaly
in Europeans.
GTPase
| INST. NEUROSCIENCE & PHYSIOLOGY | SUZANNE L DICKSON
Molecular causes of Acromegaly in a somatotroph
64
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## Page 33
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UNIVERSITY OF GOTHENBURG | SAHLGRENSKA ACADEMY
• Pit-1 defect. Snell (dw/dw) Dont get development of GH, TSH, PRL-
producing cells
• Prop-1 ”Prophet of Pit” defect. Ames (df/df): GH, TSH, PRL +LH +FSH
Pit-1 and Prop-1: master genes. Also in man. ­ Longevity??
• GHRH receptor gene defect ”little” mouse. Identified
families in Bangladesh, South America.
• GH gene defect. Antibodies against GH unfortunately
……. Continued on next slide
| INST. NEUROSCIENCE & PHYSIOLOGY | SUZANNE L DICKSON
Known genetic defects with growth defects in which
the body remains in proportion - I
65
UNIVERSITY OF GOTHENBURG | SAHLGRENSKA ACADEMY
• GH receptor gene defect. Laron dwarfism.
IGF-1 treatment partially effective. Have low IGF-1.
• STAT5b gene defect. IGF-1 treatment partially effective.
• IGF-1 gene defect. Mental retardation, deaf. IGF-1 treatment
• IGF-1 receptor gene defect. As for IGF-1 defect. No IGF-1
treatment
• (Fibroblast growth factor-receptor 3 (FGFR3) gene defect.
Achondroplasia, short arms and legs; body not in proportion.
Not linked to GH-IGF-1
| INST. NEUROSCIENCE & PHYSIOLOGY | SUZANNE L DICKSON
Known genetic defects with growth defects in which
the body remains in proportion - II
66
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## Page 34
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UNIVERSITY OF GOTHENBURG | SAHLGRENSKA ACADEMY
GH
somatostatin
IGF-1
Target organs
¯ IGF-1
synthesis & release
Defective GH gene
IGF1-R mutations
IGF1-R
GH-R
GH-R
Mutation
Laron Dwarfism
GHRH-R
Ghrelin-R
Mutation?
GHRH-R
Mutation
Defective development
of somatotrophs
“Little”
Dwarfism
Ghrelin-R
GHRH
| INST. NEUROSCIENCE & PHYSIOLOGY | SUZANNE L DICKSON
Monogenic causes of dwarfism; defective GH axis
67
UNIVERSITY OF GOTHENBURG | SAHLGRENSKA ACADEMY
Prop-1
Defect:
Ames Dwarf mice
Human dwarfs
(Krk)
Pit-1
Defect:
Snell Dwarf mice
Human dwarfs
GH
PRL
TSH
LH, FSH
Stem cell
Stem cell
Pit-1 :
1. Mediator of GHRH effect
on GH production postnatally
2. Inducer of pituitary
development prenatally
Defect earlier in development,
(e g Prop-1 instead of Pit-1)
à More hormones lacking.
| INST. NEUROSCIENCE & PHYSIOLOGY | SUZANNE L DICKSON
Dwarf mice and human equivalents: defective pituitary
master genes during development
68
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## Page 35
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UNIVERSITY OF GOTHENBURG | SAHLGRENSKA ACADEMY
Evidence that the GHRH-receptor, and not down-stream
pathways, is nonfunctional in dwarf “little” mice
40
30
20
10
GH secretion
(% of cell
content)
Little mice
Wild type
Control
dbcAMP
Forskolin
Cholera toxin
GHRH
cAMP
GHRH
AC
GH Secretion
G-prot
Forskolin
Cholera
toxin
GH secretion from pituitaries of Little mice is decreased after GHRH compared to Wild type mice.
In contrast, stimulation of the down stream G-protein adenylate cyclase (AC) cAMP signal pathway by cholera
toxin, forskolin or dbcAMP can all stimulate GH secretion in little mice
(Adapted from Jansson JO et al Science 1986)
| INST. NEUROSCIENCE & PHYSIOLOGY | SUZANNE L DICKSON
Little mice
wildtype mice
69
UNIVERSITY OF GOTHENBURG | SAHLGRENSKA ACADEMY
Dwarfism due to mutations
of human GHRH receptor
Effect of Sindh
Mutation (AlaàGlu)
Brazil (intron 1 splice donor)
Leu
D
E
I
I Y
H G V T
S I S
L A V I
F
A
V
L
T I
I
V A L
R
R L H C P
R
K
D
W
L
C S V
T
T
F
V
G
W
L
F
G
P
G A
W L V
A
W
L
V
T
S
R
W
Y
Q
S
Q
T
H
R
I
L
V
R
K
L
E
P
A
Q G S L
N
C
L
L
A S T S P
S
R
R
A
A
F
L
F
H
S
D D T D H
C
S
A
L
K
D
F
E
I A C W
T
D
D
L
D
N
L
A
G L G I R
P
L
G
E L G
L
Q
L
F
A
C
L
G
V
S
I F
I
F
Y
Q
N
K
E
R
V
T
E
I
S
R
K
W
H
G
H
D
P
E
L
P
W A
L
R
T
R
A
K
W
T
T
P
S
R
S
A
A
K
L V
S
M
T
C
I
V
Y
Y WW
I
G K
I
P
V
G V S L
N F
F L G
N I
I
L
A K
LV
T
L F
G R V
L
T F L
H
Q
N
Y
V
T
S
F
Y
S
E
E
E
A
L
L
E
L
P V P C A V P Y P P F P E S W G T I
T C D R K V A
G S
S
E
S F H S F F D P C P L T V W
G
G
S
A
T
P
W
C
L
L
G
W
T
A
P
C
G
L
T
T
N
P
M
E
E
A
A
Q
L
C
A
S
E
D
E
R
L
Q
T
I
F
D
C
E
P H M H
C
L
K
S
T
L
V S V
Y
N
H
A A
F A
L
V
A E A
F
T S
W L
M
S
S
T F I
S
P
K
S
L
F
L
F
L
L
N
I
I Y
G I H
F L P
F
I
T S
P
D
NH2
COOH
Sindh
His
Glu
Ala
Cys
Phe
Spain
Pakistan
USA
USA
D 4
Japan
Gly
Asp
Stop
Glu
Little mouse
little mouse
-/- and -/+ littermates
Little mouse
AspàGlu
| INST. NEUROSCIENCE & PHYSIOLOGY | SUZANNE L DICKSON
GHRH receptor
70
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## Page 36
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UNIVERSITY OF GOTHENBURG | SAHLGRENSKA ACADEMY
GH receptor deficiency
(Laron dwarfism)
1
2
GH
GH
receptor
inactive
X X
• GH treatment ineffective
• IGF-1 only small effect
(lack of cells with IGF-1 rec
in growth plate when no GH?)
| INST. NEUROSCIENCE & PHYSIOLOGY | SUZANNE L DICKSON
71
UNIVERSITY OF GOTHENBURG | SAHLGRENSKA ACADEMY
IGF-1 and IGF-1 receptor deficiency
IGF-1 gene defect
IGF-1 receptor gene defect
Chernausek S et al NEJM 2003
Woods KA et al NEJM 1996
Intrauterine
growth defect
Chernausek S et al NEJM 2003
Woods KA et al NEJM 1996
Intrauterine
growth defect
autosomal
recessive
| INST. NEUROSCIENCE & PHYSIOLOGY | SUZANNE L DICKSON
72
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## Page 37
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UNIVERSITY OF GOTHENBURG | SAHLGRENSKA ACADEMY
Causes of dwarfism unrelated to GH-IGF axis
Thyroid hormone deficiency in childhood (Cretinism).
Retardation of mental development & growth.
Thyroid hormones are permissive for growth.
Excess glucocorticoids - stunts growth.
Glucocorticoids are permissive for growth, but inhibitory in
high doses.
Genetic diseases:
Pygmy mouse, HMGA2 (high-mobility group A2), a transcription factor
for e g cycline A.
Human SNP 0.5 cm height.
Achondroplasia (next slide)
| INST. NEUROSCIENCE & PHYSIOLOGY | SUZANNE L DICKSON
73
UNIVERSITY OF GOTHENBURG | SAHLGRENSKA ACADEMY
Achondroplasia: Selective shortening of long bones in dogs & humans
Hypothesis: Gain of function mutation in fibroblast growth factor receptor-3
(FGFR-3). FGFR3 prevents stem cell proliferation and differentiation.
Gain of function à Autosomal dominant disease. 80% new mutations.
Diego Velázquez (1599-1660).
Museo del Prado, Madrid
(Achondroplasia “No chondrocyte proliferation”
Not responsive to GH or IGF-1 treatment.
| INST. NEUROSCIENCE & PHYSIOLOGY | SUZANNE L DICKSON
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## Page 38
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UNIVERSITY OF GOTHENBURG | SAHLGRENSKA ACADEMY
Summary
Prenatal, postnatal and pubertal body growth is regulated by different
hormones.
Postnatal longitudinal body growth is regulated by a hypothalamus pituitary
liver bone axis.
GH is diabetogenic and lipolytic in addition to growth promoting.
GH- IGF-1 axis is regulated by feeding, amino acids, lipids and glucose.
GH- IGF-1 in relation to tumour growth is a concern, but few alarming data
at present.
Dwarfism can be due to defects of various hormones and receptors in the
GHRH - GH- IGF-1 FGFR3 axis. Diagnos for right treatment.
| INST. NEUROSCIENCE & PHYSIOLOGY | SUZANNE L DICKSON
75
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