Abstract

Ornithine decarboxylase activity was studied in heart, kidney, liver, thymus, lung, spleen, skeletal muscle and fat of hypophysectomized rats after growth hormone treatment. A marked increase in enzyme activity was observed in kidney and liver, and a significant increase in heart and thymus at 4 h after injection of growth hormone. The kidney was the most responsive organ with an increase in activity of about 100 fold. The enzyme activity in kidney responded to a dose of 10 μg of growth hormone. Daily injection for 12 days raised activity only in the heart. Infestation for 6–13 days with spargana of Spirometra mansonoides, which also causes growth of hypophysectomized rats, increased enzyme activity in the heart and thymus. Intravenous injection of serum of hypophysectomized rats infested with spargana of Spirometra mansonoides caused a significant increase in the enzyme activity in liver and kidney after 4 h. Growth hormone and the serum growth factor of sparganosis seem to share the characteristic of causing an early increase in ornithine decarboxylase activity in rat tissues. The marked response in kidney and liver raises the possibility that these organs are the primary targets of both substances.

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