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IGF-1 lr3

Long R3 IGF-1, LR3-IGF-1, Insulin-like Growth Factor-1 Long Arg3

Quick Stats
Studies 41
Trials 0
Score 2
2020 pubmed

Coronary vascular growth matches IGF-1-stimulated cardiac growth in fetal sheep.

Jonker. Sonnet S SS; Giraud. George D GD; Chang. Eileen I EI; Elman. Miriam R MR; Louey. Samantha S

Key Findings

  • IGF‑1 LR3 treatment increased fetal heart mass and cardiomyocyte proliferation
  • Coronary conductance per gram of heart tissue was maintained after IGF‑1 LR3 treatment
  • Adenosine‑ and nitric‑oxide‑mediated vasodilation during hypoxia were similar in treated and control fetuses

Practical Outcomes

  • IGF‑1 LR3 can promote coordinated growth of heart muscle and its blood supply in a fetal sheep model, suggesting a potential strategy for boosting cardiac cell numbers at birth. However, the findings are from an animal fetal study, so direct dosing or protocols for humans are not established and more research is needed before any real‑world application.

Summary

In a study on near‑term fetal sheep, giving the IGF‑1 LR3 peptide boosted heart muscle cell growth and overall heart size, and the heart’s blood vessels grew proportionally so blood flow per gram of tissue stayed the same. The ways the vessels dilated (using adenosine and nitric oxide) were unchanged compared with untreated animals.

Abstract

As loss of contractile function in heart disease could often be mitigated by increased cardiomyocyte number, expansion of cardiomyocyte endowment paired with increased vascular supply is a desirable therapeutic goal. Insulin-like growth factor 1 (IGF-1) administration increases fetal cardiomyocyte proliferation and heart mass, but how fetal IGF-1 treatment affects coronary growth and function is unknown. Near-term fetal sheep underwent surgical instrumentation and were studied from 127 to 134 d gestation (term = 147 d), receiving either IGF-1 LR3 or vehicle. Coronary growth and function were interrogated using pressure-flow relationships, an episode of acute hypoxia with progressive blockade of adenosine receptors and nitric oxide synthase, and by modeling the determinants of coronary flow. The main findings were that coronary conductance was preserved on a per-gram basis following IGF-1 treatment, adenosine and nitric oxide contributed to hypoxia-mediated coronary vasodilation similarly in IGF-1-treated and Control fetuses, and the relationships between coronary flow and blood oxygen contents were similar between groups. We conclude that IGF-1-stimulated fetal myocardial growth is accompanied by appropriate expansion and function of the coronary vasculature. These findings support IGF-1 as a potential strategy to increase cardiac myocyte and coronary vascular endowment at birth.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

2020

Date

2020-06-23T00:00:00.000Z

DOI

10.1096/fj.202000215r