Abstract

Growth hormone (GH) binding and the effect of GH and insulin on glucose metabolism in rat adipocytes were studied at various time periods following hypophysectomy. Male rats were hypophysectomized at 33-34 days of age. After 6 h, 20 h or 3, 7 and 14 days adipocytes were prepared from epididymal fat pads by mild collagenase digestion (0.5 mg X ml-1, 60 min, 37 degrees C). Glucose metabolism was studied by determining the production of CO2 from [14C]glucose and the incorporation of [14C]glucose into lipids. GH binding was measured in cell aliquots using [125I]hGH. No difference in GH binding to adipocytes was observed between control rats and rats hypophysectomized or sham-operated 6 h earlier. GH binding was significantly decreased 20 h after hypophysectomy and declined further with time after hypophysectomy. Adipose tissue from normal rats is usually refractory to the insulin-like effect of GH. Adipocytes isolated from normal rats were, however, usually responsive to GH immediately after cell isolation, suggesting that refractoriness to the insulin-like effect of GH was lost during the time required for the preparation of adipocytes. The magnitude of the response to GH in adipocytes progressively declined with time after hypophysectomy. The decreased responsiveness to GH with time after hypophysectomy parallelled the decrease in GH binding. The results suggest that the pituitary, directly or indirectly, is necessary for the maintenance of GH binding sites in adipose tissue and that these binding sites are related to the insulin-like effect of GH.

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