Publication | Open Access
Mitogenic effects of growth hormone in cultured human fibroblasts. Evidence for action via local insulin-like growth factor I production.
87
Citations
34
References
1988
Year
Developmental BiologyHealth SciencesGrowth HormoneHuman GrowthMitogenic EffectsHuman Growth HormonePhysiologyCultured Human FibroblastsFibroblast Growth FactorCell ProliferationCell ReplicationCell GrowthEndocrinologyMedicineCell BiologyThymidine Incorporation
We examined human growth hormone's (hGH) effect on mitogenesis in cultured human fibroblasts, and the role of local insulin-like growth factor I (IGF-I). With 0.5% human hypopituitary serum (HPS), hGH increased thymidine incorporation (TI) over serum-free medium dose responsively, with half-maximal effect at 10 ng/ml (0.5 nM) (hGH 127 +/- 8.8%; IGF-I 107 +/- 1.7% [SEM]) (n = 10). Similarly, with 0.5% HPS, hGH and IGF-I increased cell replication by 172 +/- 8.2% and 169 +/- 25%, respectively (n = 4). Specific IGF-I monoclonal antibody (Sm1.2) dose dependently blunted TI stimulated by 10 ng/ml hGH or IGF-I (at 1:1000, 38 +/- 6.5% and 30 +/- 14% reduction, respectively). Sm1.2 also reduced cell replication by both 10 ng/ml hGH and IGF-I, respectively, to 32% and 42% of stimulated values. Dexamethasone (0.1 microM) synergistically enhanced TI by both IGF-I and hGH. A 28-h time course for TI showed that hGH stimulated a similar peak to IGF-I, lagging in its effect by 4-10 h. We have provided further evidence that hGH stimulates growth of cultured human fibroblasts via local IGF-I production, consistent with IGF-I's paracrine-autocrine role.
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