Abstract

Many of the effects of growth hormone are now thought to be mediated via the stimulation of insulin-like growth factor-I (IGF-I) production by many tissues, especially the liver, with this stimulation being dependent upon the presence of the GH-receptor (GHR). IGF-I gene expression occurs via alternative promoters giving rise to class 1 and 2 transcripts, of which class 2 is thought to be preferentially responsive to GH (Saunders, Dickson, Pell & Gilmour, 1991).The effects of IGF-I include the stimulation of DNA synthesis (mitogenesis) and protein synthesis in most cell types, together with the differentiation of many cell types into mature tissue, including the differentiation of muscle cells into muscle fibres. Thus the GH/IGF-I axis has been found to play a major part in the control of animal growth. For this reason, we studied the age related changes in IGF-I and GHR mRNA expression in pig liver and skeletal muscle.

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