Extracellular signal-regulated kinase and phosphoinositol-3 kinase mediate IGF-1 induced proliferation of fetal sheep cardiomyocytes.
Sundgren. Nathan C NC; Giraud. George D GD; Schultz. Jess M JM; Lasarev. Michael R MR; Stork. Philip J S PJ; Thornburg. Kent L KL
Key Findings
- LR3 IGF‑1 boosts fetal sheep cardiomyocyte proliferation 3‑5× in culture
- IGF‑1‑induced proliferation requires both ERK and PI3K signaling; inhibition of either blocks the effect
- IGF‑1 does not cause cardiomyocyte hypertrophy or increase binucleation in vivo or in vitro
Practical Outcomes
- For biohackers, IGF‑1 can stimulate heart cell division without causing enlargement, suggesting it’s not a simple way to grow a stronger heart. The need for both ERK and PI3K pathways means any protocol aiming to use IGF‑1 for cardiac benefits must consider these signaling routes and potential off‑target effects. Caution is advised since the findings are from fetal sheep and may not translate to adult humans.
Summary
The study shows that a special form of IGF‑1 (LR3 IGF‑1) makes fetal sheep heart cells divide, but it doesn’t make them bigger or cause them to have extra nuclei. Both the ERK and PI3K pathways are needed for this cell‑division effect, and blocking either one stops it.
Abstract
Growth of the fetal heart involves cardiomyocyte enlargement, division, and maturation. Insulin-like growth factor-1 (IGF-1) is implicated in many aspects of growth and is likely to be important in developmental heart growth. IGF-1 stimulates the IGF-1 receptor (IGF1R) and downstream signaling pathways, including extracellular signal-regulated kinase (ERK) and phosphoinositol-3 kinase (PI3K). We hypothesized that IGF-1 stimulates cardiomyocyte proliferation and enlargement through stimulation of the ERK cascade and stimulates cardiomyocyte differentiation through the PI3K cascade. In vivo administration of Long R3 IGF-1 (LR3 IGF-1) did not stimulate cardiomyocyte hypertrophy but led to a decreased percentage of cells that were binucleated in vivo. In culture, LR3 IGF-1 increased myocyte bromodeoxyuridine (BrdU) uptake by three- to five-fold. The blockade of either ERK or PI3K signaling (by UO-126 or LY-294002, respectively) completely abolished BrdU uptake stimulated by LR3 IGF-1. LR3 IGF-1 did not increase footprint area, but as expected, phenylephrine stimulated an increase in binucleated cardiomyocyte size. We conclude that 1) IGF-1 through IGF1R stimulates cardiomyocyte division in vivo; hyperplastic growth is the most likely explanation of IGF-1 stimulated heart growth in vivo; 2) IGF-1 through IGF1R does not stimulate binucleation in vitro or in vivo; 3) IGF-1 through IGF1R does not stimulate hypertrophy either in vivo or in vitro; and 4) IGF-1 through IGF1R requires both ERK and PI3K signaling for proliferation of near-term fetal sheep cardiomyocytes in vitro.
Study Information
pubmed
2003
2003-08-28T00:00:00.000Z
10.1152/ajpregu.00232.2003