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© 2004 The American Society for Nutritional Sciences J. Nutr. 134:1020-1027, May 2004


Biochemical and Molecular Actions of Nutrients

Insulin Increases the Abundance of the Growth Hormone Receptor in Liver and Adipose Tissue of Periparturient Dairy Cows1

Robert P. Rhoads*, Jin W. Kim*, Brian J. Leury{dagger}, Lance H. Baumgard*, Nthabisheng Segoale*, Stuart J. Frank**, Dale E. Bauman* and Yves R. Boisclair*,2

* Department of Animal Science, Cornell University, Ithaca, NY 14853-4801; {dagger} University of Melbourne, Victoria, Australia, 3010; ** Department of Medicine, Division of Endocrinology and Metabolism, and Department of Cell Biology and Physiology, University of Alabama at Birmingham, and Veterans Affairs Medical Center, Birmingham, AL 35294

2To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: yrb1{at}cornell.edu.

After parturition, increased growth hormone (GH) secretion is important to preserve the metabolic homeostasis of energy-deficient dairy cows. Elevated plasma GH promotes lipid mobilization from adipose tissue, but paradoxically, is associated with depressed concentration of insulin-like growth factor-I (IGF-I), a growth factor produced in a GH-dependent fashion in liver. Primary factors regulating GH responses of liver and adipose tissue are poorly understood in periparturient dairy cows. Consistent with insulin being such a factor, its plasma concentration declined concomitantly with net energy balance (EB) and with plasma IGF-I in a group of 9 periparturient dairy cows. To test the role of insulin in regulating cellular determinants of GH responsiveness, hyperinsulinemic-euglycemic clamps were performed on 6 dairy cows in late pregnancy (28 d prepartum) before the reductions in EB, insulin, and IGF-I were initiated, and when they were completed in early lactation (10 d postpartum). Infusion of insulin nearly doubled the plasma concentration of IGF-I (P < 0.001) and hepatic levels of IGF-I mRNA during both states (P < 0.05). In liver, these responses were associated with increased abundance of the GH receptor protein (GHR; P < 0.05), whereas the abundance of intracellular mediators of GH actions (JAK2, STAT5, or STAT3) remained unaffected. Insulin also doubled GHR abundance in adipose tissue (P < 0.01), indicating that this effect is not liver specific. These results raise the possibility that insulin regulates the efficiency of GH signaling in liver and adipose tissue of dairy cows by acting as a rheostat of GHR synthesis.


KEY WORDS: • pregnancy • lactation • hyperinsulinemic-euglycemic clamp • insulin-like growth factor-I




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