Abstract

Two synthetic insulin-like compounds consisting of the B-chain of insulin linked via disulfide bonds to A chains corresponding to the A-domain or the A- and D-domains of insulin-like growth factor I (IGF-I) have been evaluated for mitogenic activity and for binding to IGF receptors and IGF carrier proteins. Both compounds are 3- to 5-fold more potent mitogens than insulin, and have a comparably increased affinity for the type I IGF receptor that mediates these mitogenic effects in chick embryo fibroblasts. Neither compound interacts with IGF carrier proteins. These results indicate that the A-domain of IGF-I is importantly involved in its growth-promoting properties.

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