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Research Article

Suppression of Receptors for Prolactin and Estrogen in Rat Liver Due to Treatment with the Growth Hormone Analogue Produced by the Tapeworm Spirometra Mansonoides

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Pages 425-446 | Published online: 26 Sep 2008
 

Abstract

Somatogenic hormones play an important role in regulation of receptors for prolactin (PRL) and estrogen. Plerocercoids of the tapeworm, S. mansonoides produce a factor which mimics some, but not all of the actions reported for GH. Intact female rats were subjected to a constant infusion of plerocercoid growth factor (PGF) via a subcutaneous infection for two weeks to determine if PGF influences receptors for PRL, GH or estradiol. The rate of weight gain in the PGF-treated rats was accelerated in spite of a marked reduction in serum GH. Partially-purified PGF specifically displaced [125I]hGH from rat liver receptors but microsomes prepared from rats treated with PGF specifically bound significantly less [125I]hGH than microsomes from control rats. The reduction in [125I]hGH binding was not due to occupancy or to a change in affinity but to a suppression in receptor concentration. Scatchard analysis of [3H]estradiol binding in rat liver cytosols shows a 50% reduction in receptor concentration in the PGF-treated group. Specific binding of [3H]estradiol in anterior pituitary was also suppressed by PGF treatment.

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