학술논문

The History of the Insulin-Like Growth Factor System.
Document Type
Article
Source
Hormone Research in Paediatrics. Nov2022, Vol. 95 Issue 6, p619-630. 12p.
Subject
*SOMATOMEDIN
*CELL receptors
*PEPTIDE receptors
*HORMONE receptors
*CARRIER proteins
*PEPTIDE hormones
*SOMATOTROPIN receptors
Language
ISSN
1663-2818
Abstract
The growth hormone (GH)–insulin-like growth factor (IGF) cascade is central to the regulation of growth and metabolism. This article focuses on the history of the components of the IGF system, with an emphasis on the peptide hormones, IGF-I and -II, their cell surface receptors, and the IGF binding proteins (IGFBPs) and IGFBP proteases that regulate the availability of the peptide hormones for interaction with their receptors in relevant target tissues. We describe landmark events in the evolution of the somatomedin hypothesis, including evidence that has become available from experiments at the molecular and cellular levels, whole animal and tissue-specific gene knockouts, studies of cancer epidemiology, identification of prismatic human cases, and short- and long-term clinical trials of IGF-I therapy in humans. In addition, this new evidence has expanded our clinical definition of GH insensitivity (GHI) beyond growth hormone receptor mutations (classic Laron syndrome) to include conditions that cause primary IGF deficiency by impacting post-receptor signal transduction, IGF production, IGF availability to interact with the IGF-I receptor (IGF-1R), and defects in the IGF-1R, itself. We also discuss the clinical aspects of IGFs, from their description as insulin-like activity, to the use of IGF-I in the diagnosis and treatment of GH deficiency, and to the use of recombinant human IGF-I for therapy of children with GHI. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]