TY - JOUR
T1 - Growth hormone (GH)-dependent hepatic GH receptors in the Japanese eel, Anguilla japonica
T2 - Effects of hypophysectomy and GH injection
AU - Mori, Ikue
AU - Sakamoto, Tatsuya
AU - Hirano, Tetsuya
N1 - Funding Information:
We are grateful to Professor Howard A. Bern, University of California at Berkeley, for his invaluable advice and encouragements during the course of this study and also for critical reading of the manuscript. We are indebted to Tokyo Research Laboratories of Kyowa Hakko Kogyo Co. for generous supply of recombinant eGH. This study was supported in part by grants-in-aid from the Fisheries Agency and the Ministry of Education, Japan.
PY - 1992/3
Y1 - 1992/3
N2 - Control mechanisms of growth hormone (GH) receptors in the eel liver were examined by following the time course of changes in total (MgCl2-treated membranes) and free (untreated membranes) GH-binding sites after hypophysectomy and replacement therapy with homologous GH. Both total and free binding sites decreased significantly 1 week after hypophysectomy. Scatchard analysis indicated that the reduction in GH receptors was primarily due to a decrease in the number of binding sites, rather than to a change in binding affinity. When recombinant eel GH was injected intramuscularly into hypophysectomized eels (2 μg/g body wt), plasma GH concentration increased to a maximal value after 10 hr and decreased to the initial level by 72 hr. Free binding sites decreased to a minimal value 24 hr after the injection and returned to the initial level after 72 hr. The reduction in free binding sites seems to be due to occupation of GH receptors. Total binding sites increased gradually to almost twofold over those of the controls 5 days after the injection, the increase being due to an increase in the binding capacity. GH appears to be importantly involved in inducing and maintaining its own receptors in the eel liver.
AB - Control mechanisms of growth hormone (GH) receptors in the eel liver were examined by following the time course of changes in total (MgCl2-treated membranes) and free (untreated membranes) GH-binding sites after hypophysectomy and replacement therapy with homologous GH. Both total and free binding sites decreased significantly 1 week after hypophysectomy. Scatchard analysis indicated that the reduction in GH receptors was primarily due to a decrease in the number of binding sites, rather than to a change in binding affinity. When recombinant eel GH was injected intramuscularly into hypophysectomized eels (2 μg/g body wt), plasma GH concentration increased to a maximal value after 10 hr and decreased to the initial level by 72 hr. Free binding sites decreased to a minimal value 24 hr after the injection and returned to the initial level after 72 hr. The reduction in free binding sites seems to be due to occupation of GH receptors. Total binding sites increased gradually to almost twofold over those of the controls 5 days after the injection, the increase being due to an increase in the binding capacity. GH appears to be importantly involved in inducing and maintaining its own receptors in the eel liver.
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U2 - 10.1016/0016-6480(92)90083-V
DO - 10.1016/0016-6480(92)90083-V
M3 - Article
C2 - 1577242
AN - SCOPUS:0026555872
SN - 0016-6480
VL - 85
SP - 385
EP - 391
JO - General and Comparative Endocrinology
JF - General and Comparative Endocrinology
IS - 3
ER -