Abstract
ABSTRACT: In a previous work, we reported that passive immunization with anti-growth hormone-releasing hormone (GHRH) anti-bodies (GHRH-Ab) in neonatal rats caused disruption of somatotropic function that was still present 60 d posttreatment. We studied the reversibility of this condition by growth hormone (GH) replacement therapy. Neonatal rats received GHRH-Ab (50 μ L/rat, s.c.) or normal rabbit serum every second day from birth up to postnatal d 10 and received hGH (0.4 μg/g body weight, s.c, b.i.d.) or vehicle in a 2 χ 2 factorial design. Animals were studied on d 11 of age. In GHRH-Ab-treated rats, GH therapy l) counteracted the reduced body weight and low plasma IGF-I levels; 2) failed to modify the reduced pituitary weight and GH content; 3) further reduced the low plasma GH levels; 4) partially restored the defective GH responsiveness to GHRH; 5) failed to modify the reduced hypothalamic somatostatin and increased GHRH gene expression in the hypothalamus; and 6) reverted the decreased pituitary somatostatin binding. Morphologic and morphometric evaluation of the pituitary gland from GHRH-Ab+GH pups showed that the number of GH-labeled structures was lower than in normal rat serum-GH-treated pups, whereas the total GH immunorcactrvify per unit surface, an index of intracellular hormone concentration, was slightly higher than in vehicle-GH or GHRH-Ab pups. As determined by electron microscopy, somatotropcs from GHRH-Ab+GH pups had morphologic features of high cellular activity. It appears that in GHRH-deprived pups GH replacement therapy can normalize most but not all altered indices of the somatotropic function. The effects of GH are mainly directed at the pituitary, whereas the sensitivity of the hypothalamus to GH replacement is lower.
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Cella, S., De Gennaro Colonna, V., Locatelli, V. et al. Somatotropic Dysfunction in Growth Hormone-Releasing Hormone-Deprived Neonatal Rats: Effect of Growth Hormone Replacement Therapy. Pediatr Res 36, 315–322 (1994). https://doi.org/10.1203/00006450-199409000-00008
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1203/00006450-199409000-00008