Growth Hormone Specific Stimulation of Mitosis by Size-fractionated Serum from Patients with Growth Hormone Insufficiency: a Study on the Rat Lymphoma Cell Line, Nb2
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The aim was to investigate the bioactivity of a high-molecular weight human growth hormone, identified following molecular sieve chromatography of serum. Nine patients with pituitary disease and GH insufficiency were studied. All patients had non-detectable levels of immunoreactive GH, less than 0.2 micrograms/l, in diurnal serum profiles. GH bioactivity was determined before and after size-fractionation of serum. The bioassay is based on the finding that a rat lymphoma cell line, Nb2, proliferates in the presence of lactogens. GH and PRL immunoreactivities were measured by radioimmunoassays. Pronounced GH immunoreactivity was found in fractions of sera from 7 out of the 9 patients and of 2 of 4 control sera, particularly in fractions corresponding to the elution volume of high-molecular weight proteins (greater than 160 kD). PRL immunoreactivity was only detected in fractions corresponding to the elution volume of monomeric PRL. Unfractionated serum had a dose-dependent mitogenic effect on the Nb2 cells. GH-antibodies could not inhibit this effect. Fractions of serum obtained from the patients stimulated Nb2 cell division as well. The mitogenic effect of serum fractions could be inhibited by GH-antibodies. Thus, high-molecular weight GH circulating in patients with GH insufficiency were shown to exert a GH-specific bioactivity in vitro after size-fractionation.
Ban V, Chaudhary B, Allinson K, Santarius T, Kirollos R Neurosurgery. 2017; 80(1):E170-E175.
PMID: 28362886 PMC: 5808144. DOI: 10.1093/neuros/nyw003.