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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 1
2003 pubmed 60 citations

Oocyte-mediated suppression of follicle-stimulating hormone- and insulin-like growth factor-induced secretion of steroids and inhibin-related proteins by bovine granulosa cells in vitro: possible role of transforming growth factor alpha.

Glister. Claire C; Groome. Nigel P NP; Knight. Philip G PG

Key Findings

  • LR3‑IGF‑1 strongly increases secretion of inhibin A, activin A, follistatin, estradiol and progesterone from bovine granulosa cells.
  • Co‑cultured oocytes release TGF‑alpha, which dose‑dependently suppresses most of the IGF‑ and FSH‑induced hormone production.
  • Adding TGF‑alpha alone mimics the oocyte’s suppressive effects, indicating it’s the likely mediator.

Practical Outcomes

  • The findings are not directly applicable to human health or biohacking protocols. They suggest that IGF‑1 LR3 can stimulate ovarian hormone production, but its effects may be modulated by other factors like TGF‑alpha. No actionable dosing or performance advice can be drawn from this bovine cell‑culture study.

Summary

The study shows that a synthetic IGF‑1 analogue (LR3‑IGF‑1) makes cow ovarian cells produce more hormones, but nearby egg cells release a protein (TGF‑alpha) that can block many of those hormone‑boosting effects. This interaction was seen only in a lab dish with cow cells, not in humans.

Abstract

The objective was to investigate the potential role of the oocyte in modulating proliferation and basal, FSH-induced and insulin-like growth factor (IGF)-induced secretion of inhibin A (inh A), activin A (act A), follistatin (FS), estradiol (E(2)), and progesterone (P(4)) by mural bovine granulosa cells. Cells from 4- to 6-mm follicles were cultured in serum-free medium containing insulin and androstenedione, and the effects of ovine FSH and IGF analogue (LR3-IGF-1) were tested alone and in the presence of denuded bovine oocytes (2, 8, or 20 per well). Medium was changed every 48 h, cultures were terminated after 144 h, and viable cell number was determined. Results are based on combined data from four independent cultures and are presented for the last time period only when responses were maximal. Both FSH and IGF increased (P < 0.001) secretion of inh A, act A, FS, E(2), and P(4) and raised cell number. In the absence of FSH or IGF, coculture with oocytes had no effect on any of the measured hormones, although cell number was increased up to 1.8-fold (P < 0.0001). Addition of oocytes to FSH-stimulated cells dose-dependently suppressed (P < 0.0001) inh A (6-fold maximum suppression), act A (5.5-fold), FS (3.6-fold), E(2) (4.6-fold), and P(4) (2.4-fold), with suppression increasing with FSH dose. Likewise, oocytes suppressed (P < 0.001) IGF-induced secretion of inh A, act A, FS, and E(2) (P < 0.05) but enhanced IGF-induced P(4) secretion (1.7-fold; P < 0.05). Given the similarity of these oocyte-mediated actions to those we observed previously following epidermal growth factor (EGF) treatment, we used immunocytochemistry to determine whether bovine oocytes express EGF or transforming growth factor (TGF) alpha. Intense staining with TGFalpha antibody (but not with EGF antibody) was detected in oocytes both before and after coculture. Experiments involving addition of TGFalpha to granulosa cells confirmed that the peptide mimicked the effects of oocytes on cell proliferation and on FSH- and IGF-induced hormone secretion. These experiments indicate that bovine oocytes secrete a factor(s) capable of modulating granulosa cell proliferation and responsiveness to FSH and IGF in terms of steroidogenesis and production of inhibin-related peptides, bovine oocytes express TGFalpha but not EGF, and TGFalpha is a prime candidate for mediating the actions of oocytes on bovine granulosa cells.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

2003

Date

2003-03-01T00:00:00.000Z

DOI

10.1095/biolreprod.102.008698

Citations

60

References

39