Portuguese
Albanian
Arabic
Armenian
Azerbaijani
Belarusian
Bengali
Bosnian
Catalan
Czech
Danish
Deutsch
Dutch
English
Estonian
Finnish
Français
Greek
Haitian Creole
Hebrew
Hindi
Hungarian
Icelandic
Indonesian
Irish
Italian
Japanese
Korean
Latvian
Lithuanian
Macedonian
Mongolian
Norwegian
Persian
Polish
Portuguese
Romanian
Russian
Serbian
Slovak
Slovenian
Spanish
Swahili
Swedish
Turkish
Ukrainian
Vietnamese
Български
中文(简体)
中文(繁體)
The American journal of physiology 1984-Apr

Diabetogenic activity of native and biosynthetic human growth hormone in obese (ob/ob) mouse.

Apenas usuários registrados podem traduzir artigos
Entrar Inscrever-se
O link é salvo na área de transferência
J L Kostyo
S E Gennick
S E Sauder

Palavras-chave

Resumo

It has been repeatedly suggested that diabetogenic activity is not an intrinsic property of native pituitary growth hormone (GH) and that the diabetogenic effects produced by GH preparations are due to low-molecular-weight contaminants or degradation products of the hormone. This possibility was evaluated in this study by assessing the ability of purified native human GH (hGH) and biosynthetic methionyl-hGH to exacerbate fasting hyperglycemia and glucose intolerance in the obese (ob/ob) mouse. Native hGH that had been purified by DEAE-cellulose chromatography (A-type; 1.8 IU/mg) produced fasting hyperglycemia and glucose intolerance in the ob/ob mouse when injected subcutaneously at doses of 50 micrograms/day or greater for 3 days. It had no effect when a single subcutaneous dose of 200 micrograms was administered 24 h previously. To eliminate possible contamination with smaller peptides, the hGH was gel-filtered on a column of Sephacryl S-200 in 6 M guanidine-HCl. When injected subcutaneously into ob/ob mice at a dose of 50 micrograms/day or greater for 3 days, the guanidine-treated hGH produced glucose intolerance. Also biosynthetic methionyl-hGH produced marked fasting hyperglycemia and glucose intolerance when injected subcutaneously at doses of 50 or 100 micrograms/day for 3 days. These results support the conclusion that hGH itself is indeed diabetogenic but that chronic exposure of the organism to the hormone is required for its effects on glucose metabolism to become clearly manifest.

Junte-se à nossa
página do facebook

O mais completo banco de dados de ervas medicinais apoiado pela ciência

  • Funciona em 55 idiomas
  • Curas herbais apoiadas pela ciência
  • Reconhecimento de ervas por imagem
  • Mapa GPS interativo - marcar ervas no local (em breve)
  • Leia publicações científicas relacionadas à sua pesquisa
  • Pesquise ervas medicinais por seus efeitos
  • Organize seus interesses e mantenha-se atualizado com as notícias de pesquisa, testes clínicos e patentes

Digite um sintoma ou doença e leia sobre ervas que podem ajudar, digite uma erva e veja as doenças e sintomas contra os quais ela é usada.
* Todas as informações são baseadas em pesquisas científicas publicadas

Google Play badgeApp Store badge