Contact: Aline McKenzie
aline.mckenzie@utsouthwestern.edu
214-648-3404
UT Southwestern Medical Center
DALLAS – June 27, 2008 – Researchers
at UT Southwestern Medical Center have determined that starvation
blocks the effects of growth hormone via a mechanism that may have
implications in treating diabetes and extending life span.
"It's
been well-established that growth is blunted during starvation. But our
work shows that this is not just from running out of energy. It's much
more sophisticated than that," said Dr. Steven Kliewer, professor of
molecular biology and senior author of a study available online and
appearing in today's issue of the journal
Cell Metabolism.
Using
genetically altered mice, the researchers found that during fasting,
the actions of growth hormone are blocked by a fat-burning hormone
called FGF21.
"It's something that we hadn't anticipated," said Dr. Kliewer.
Growth
hormone has many functions in the growth and reproduction of cells,
such as controlling the length of developing arm and leg bones in
children.
Growth hormone has several other functions,
however, even in adults. It promotes the breakdown of fats, stimulates
creation of protein and increases levels of IGF-1 (insulin-like growth
factor-1), a hormone that promotes growth. Too much growth hormone can
cause insulin resistance, resulting in diabetes, and lead to other
disorders.
In the current study, mice that were genetically
altered to produce excess FGF21 grew to be much smaller than ordinary
mice, even though they ate more and had more fat in proportion to their
size.
Paradoxically, and to the researchers' surprise, the
altered, smaller mice produced much greater amounts of growth hormone
than normal.
Why didn't the altered mice grow larger than
normal in response? The researchers found that FGF21 does not block the
production of growth hormone; rather, it works to prevent growth
hormone from activating the genes it normally controls.
Interfering with the actions of growth hormone has been shown to increase life span in mice, Dr. Kliewer said.
"In
addition, intermittent fasting – which increases FGF21 concentrations –
also extends life span in mice. This raises the intriguing possibility
that FGF21 might be a longevity factor," Dr. Kliewer said.
"This
is something that we're beginning to test in the lab," he said. "But
our genetically engineered mice have all the classic hallmarks of
extended life span: growth hormone resistance, low concentrations of
IGF-1, increased insulin sensitivity and small size."
FGF21 is
already being tested in human clinical trials for treatment of obesity
and diabetes in adults, but the new findings linking FGF21 to
interference with growth hormone might indicate that caution is needed
before using it in children or teens, Dr. Kliewer said.
###
Other
UT Southwestern researchers involved in the study were lead author Dr.
Takeshi Inagaki, instructor of molecular biology; Dr. Vicky Lin,
postdoctoral research fellow in pharmacology; and Dr. David
Mangelsdorf, chairman of pharmacology and a Howard Hughes Medical
Institute investigator. Dr. Moosa Mohammadi from New York University
School of Medicine also participated in the study.
The work was supported by the National Institutes of Health, the Welch Foundation and the Howard Hughes Medical Institute.
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Dr. Steven Kliewer -- http://www.utsouthwestern.edu/findfac/professional/0,2356,54583,00.html