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Biological effects of GH

Biological effects of GH. Somatotropic Growth and cell proliferation IGF-I mediated Metabolic Direct action of GH IGF-I independent Many tissues All nutrients. Effects of GH on metabolism Nutrient partitioning After absorption Independent of digestion process

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Biological effects of GH

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  1. Biological effects of GH • Somatotropic • Growth and cell proliferation • IGF-I mediated • Metabolic • Direct action of GH • IGF-I independent • Many tissues • All nutrients

  2. Effects of GH on metabolism • Nutrient partitioning • After absorption • Independent of digestion process • Independent of nutrient expenditure

  3. Nutrient partitioning during growth • Alteration of growth by exogenous GH • Alteration in nutrient partitioning between muscles and adipose tissue • Increased daily gain • Increased feed efficiency • Decreased fat deposition • Increased protein deposition • Age-dependent response

  4. Action of GH • Different between adipose and muscle • Growth of muscle in response to GH • Depends on availability of dietary proteins and energy • Involves IGF-I • Decreased fat accumulation • Inhibition of glucose uptake

  5. Action of GH • Decreased fat accumulation • Inhibition of glucose utilization • Glucose diverted to muscles • Net results • Decreased adipocyte hypertrophy • Increased muscle growth

  6. Effects on adipoccytes • Chronic • Lipogenesis • Inhibited • Fatty acid synthesis • Lipolysis • Stimulated when undernutrition

  7. Mechanism • Inhibition of insulin action on adipocytes • Decreased sensitivity of adipocytes to insulin stimulation • Decreased glucose usage by the cells • Independent of receptor number or intracellular signaling system • Inhibition of fatty acid synthase expression • Interference with insulin signaling pathway • Direct genomic effects

  8. Effects on lipolysis • Indirect mechanism • Alteration of adipocyte responsiveness to acute lipolytic signaling pathway • Highly dependent on nutritional status of the individual

  9. Increased hepatic gluconeogenesis • Direct effects • Inhibition of insulin action • Increased efficiency of amino acid utilization • Reduced oxidation • Results in muscle fiber hypertrophy

  10. Pancreatic hormones

  11. Pancreas • Exocrine organ • Digestive enzymes • Discovery of the first hormone (secretin) • Endocrine organ • Islets • Described by Langerhans • Islet of Langerhans

  12. Cell composition • Two major types • Alpha • Glucagon • Beta • Insulin • Other cells • D cells (SS) • F cells (pancreatic polypeptide)

  13. Regulation of glucose metabolism • Glucose homeostasis • Movement of glucose into and out of extracellular space • Involvement of many tissues • Liver • Adipose tissue • Muscle • Two hormones • Insulin • Glucagon

  14. Regulation of glucose metabolism • Glucose homeostasis • Basic concept • Coordinated relationship between alpha (glucagon) and beta (insulin) cells under control of glucose sensor

  15. Regulation of glucose metabolism • Glucose homeostasis • Basic concept • Particular arrangement of cells within the islet • Specialized cell membrane

  16. Insulin • Required for normal growth and development • Only hormone that can lower blood glucose level • Dominant metabolic regulator • Unregulated glucose level if absent • Hypoglycemia if too high • Cause neural shock

  17. Biochemistry • Two subunits • Alpha and beta • Linked by two disulfide bridges • Synthesized as prohormone • Preproinsulin • Proinsulin precursor • Proteolytic cleavage • Proinsulin • Formation of disulfide bridges

  18. Insulin • Coupled with zinc within the beta cells • Very short life • Around 5 to 15 min after synthesis • Metabolized by kidneys and liver

  19. Glucagon • Biochemistry • Single peptide • 29 AA • Similar structurally to gastric inhibitory peptide and VIP • Cleaved from larger protein • Highly conserved • Identical among mammals

  20. Other pancreatic peptides • SS • Localized in D cells • Located adjacent to alpha and beta cells • Local action of SS • Affects function of intestine • Movement of nutrients

  21. Pancreatic polypeptide • Unclear function in mammals • Suppression of SS secretion by pancreas and intestine • Inhibition of gallbladder and pancreatic enzyme secretion • Secretion affected by nutrient uptake by the intestine

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