Abstract

Although brain injury induced by undernutrition during early life is well described, the mechanisms that mediate the effects of undernutrition on brain development are not known. IGF-I plays an important role in the stimulation of postnatal somatic and brain growth. We have shown that IGF-I overexpression in brain ameliorates the effects of undernutrition on early postnatal brain growth, and thus, we postulated that alterations in IGF-I expression or action mediate the pathogenesis of malnutrition-induced brain injury. To begin to address this issue we evaluated the influence of undernutrition on brain IGF-I expression during early postnatal development in mice. Undernutrition was induced in mice by separating half of the pups in each litter from their lactating dams for a defined period each day. Pups were killed at postnatal day (P) 7, P14, P21, and P28. The changes in IGF-I mRNA were quantified by ribonuclease protection assay. At P7 IGF-I mRNA abundance in undernourished animals was increased in cerebral cortex (223% of controls), but decreased in diencephalon (36% of controls). At P14, IGF-I mRNA abundance was increased in diencephalon (230% of controls). Although there were no other statistically significant alterations of IGF-I mRNA in undernourished mice, IGF-I abundance in the cerebral cortex appeared increased at P14 (142% of controls), and in cerebellum it was consistently but modestly decreased (78 and 59% of controls) from P7 to P21, respectively. We conclude that nutrition regulates murine brain IGF-I expression in a developmentally specific fashion that is dependent on the region of expression. Importantly, the influence of undernutrition on IGF-I expression is markedly different in the brain than in liver, where nutritional deficiency profoundly decreases IGF-I expression. We speculate that the relative preservation of or increases in regional brain IGF-I expression explain, at least in part, the well-known finding that undernutrition during early postnatal development has less marked growth-retarding effects on the brain than it does on the soma.

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