Serum IGF-I Is Not a Reliable Pharmacodynamic Marker of Exogenous Growth Hormone Activity in Mice

2011 
Serum IGF-I is a well-established pharmacodynamic marker of GH administration in humans and has been used for this purpose in animal studies. However, its general suitability in wild-type laboratory mice has not been demonstrated. Here we show that treatment with recombinant human GH (rhGH) in four different strains of laboratory mice increases body weight, lean body mass, and liver weight but does not increase hepatic expression and release of IGF-I. In contrast and as expected, hypophysectomized rats show a rapid increase in serum IGF-I after rhGH administration. The lack of IGF-I up-regulation in mice occurs despite hepatic activation of the Janus kinase/signal transducer and activator of transcription (JAK/STAT) pathway and is not explained by GH dose, route of administration, origin of GH (i.e. recombinant human, bovine, and murine GH), treatment duration, genetic background, sex, or formation of neutralizing antibodies. Effects on other components of the GH/IGF pathway were highly influenced by gene...
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