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Control of growth hormone receptor and insulin-like growth factor-I expression by cortisol in ovine fetal skeletal muscle

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TLDR
Cortisol is a developmental regulator of IGF‐I gene expression and is responsible for suppressing expression of this gene in ovine skeletal muscle near term, and these observations have important implications for muscle development both before and after birth.
Abstract
Insulin-like growth factor (IGF)-I has an important role in myogenesis but its developmental regulation in skeletal muscle before birth remains unknown. In other tissues, cortisol modulates IGF gene expression and is responsible for many of the prepartum maturational changes essential for neonatal survival. Hence, using RNase protection assays and ovine riboprobes, expression of the IGF-I and growth hormone receptor (GHR) genes was examined in ovine skeletal muscle during late gestation and after experimental manipulation of fetal plasma cortisol levels by fetal adrenalectomy and exogenous cortisol infusion. Muscle IGF-I, but not GHR, mRNA abundance decreased with increasing gestational age in parallel with the prepartum rise in plasma cortisol. Abolition of this cortisol surge by fetal adrenalectomy prevented the prepartum fall in muscle IGF-I mRNA abundance. Conversely, raising cortisol levels by exogenous infusion earlier in gestation prematurely lowered muscle IGF-I mRNA abundance but had no effect on GHR mRNA. When all data were combined, plasma cortisol and muscle IGF-I mRNA abundance were inversely correlated in individual fetuses. Cortisol is, therefore, a developmental regulator of IGF-I gene expression and is responsible for suppressing expression of this gene in ovine skeletal muscle near term. These observations have important implications for muscle development both before and after birth, particularly during conditions which alter intrauterine cortisol exposure.

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Endocrine mechanisms of intrauterine programming.

TL;DR: Endocrine changes may be both the cause and the consequence of intrauterine programming and permanently reset endocrine systems, such as the somatotrophic and hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axes, which, in turn, may contribute to the pathogenesis of adult disease.
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The intergenerational effects of fetal programming: non-genomic mechanisms for the inheritance of low birth weight and cardiovascular risk

TL;DR: Evidence is described that the programming phenomenon may not be limited to the first generation offspring and may represent a mechanism for the non-genetic inheritance of a predisposition to low birth weight and adverse cardiovascular risk across a number of generations.
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The insulin-like growth factors and feto-placental growth.

TL;DR: The Igf2gene appears to provide the constitutive drive for intrauterine growth via its placental effects and direct paracrine actions on fetal tissue while the Igf1gene regulates fetal growth in relation to the nutrient supply.
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Maternal Undernutrition Influences Placental-Fetal Development

TL;DR: Fetal growth is associated with maternal nutrition during pregnancy, placental growth and vascular development, and placental nutrient transport and this review associates fetal growth with placental homeostasis.
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Cortisol Stimulates Cell Cycle Activity in the Cardiomyocyte of the Sheep Fetus

TL;DR: Increases in fetal heart mass associated with subpressor doses of cortisol are due to cardiomyocyte proliferation and not hypertrophic growth, whereas cortisol infused into the fetal sheep heart has no effect on cardiomeocyte size or maturational state, it stimulates entry of carduomyocytes in the cell cycle.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Mice carrying null mutations of the genes encoding insulin-like growth factor I (Igf-1) and type 1 IGF receptor (Igf1r)

TL;DR: In addition to generalized organ hypoplasia in Igf1r(-/-) embryos, including the muscles, and developmental delays in ossification, deviations from normalcy were observed in the central nervous system and epidermis.
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Growth Hormone and the Insulin-Like Growth Factor System in Myogenesis*

TL;DR: IGFs can be viewed as extracellular second messengers that mediate most, if not all, such actions of agents that stimulate cell proliferation, in contrast to the relatively large number of growth factors that inhibit the process.
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IGF-I is required for normal embryonic growth in mice.

TL;DR: IGF-I appears to be essential for correct embryonic development in mice and is reported to affect linear growth, glucose metabolism, organ homeostasis, and the immune and neurologic systems.
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Myogenic Vector Expression of Insulin-like Growth Factor I Stimulates Muscle Cell Differentiation and Myofiber Hypertrophy in Transgenic Mice *

TL;DR: Results indicate that sustained overexpression of IGF-I in skeletal muscle elicits myofiber hypertrophy and provides the basis for manipulation of muscle physiology utilizing skeletal α-actin-based vectors.
Journal ArticleDOI

Myosin isoforms in mammalian skeletal muscle

TL;DR: The role of myosin heavy-chain (MHC) isoforms in skeletal muscle motility has been investigated by correlated biochemical-physiological studies on single skinned fibers, in agreement with results from in vitro motility assays as mentioned in this paper.
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