Abstract

The sex-linked dwarf (SLD) chicken, which lacks GH receptor (GHR), and its normal littermates provide a useful experimental system to investigate GH-dependent cellular responses. The GH dependence of insulin-like growth factor I (IGF-I) expression in tissues was examined in SLD and normal chickens of the Gifu 20 strain. Four weeks after hatching, the most abundant expression of IGF-I messenger RNA (mRNA) was observed in liver of normal chickens, whereas no IGF-mRNA expression was detected in that organ of dwarf chickens. On the contrary, in extrahepatic tissues such as spleen, lung, brain, kidney, heart, intestine, thymus, and muscle, IGF-I mRNA expression was equally observed in normal and GHR-lacking dwarf chickens. In the testis, expression of IGF-I mRNA was enhanced by about 5-fold in dwarf chickens showing an expression level comparable to that in normal liver. On day 16 in the embryonic stage, IGF-I mRNA was expressed in muscle, brain, eye, heart, and lung in both normal and SLD chick embryos. However, no IGF-I mRNA expression was observed in liver or kidney of normal and dwarf chick embryos. These results suggest that in chicken, IGF-I mRNA is expressed in liver in a GH-dependent manner after hatching, whereas in other tissues, mRNA expression is independent of GH and GHR before and after hatching, except for testis, in which GH seems to inhibit IGF-I mRNA expression.

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