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Am J Physiol Endocrinol Metab 280: E877-E885, 2001;
0193-1849/01 $5.00
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Vol. 280, Issue 6, E877-E885, June 2001

Immunization against IGF-I prevents increases in protein synthesis in diabetic rats after resistance exercise

Mark J. Fedele, Charles H. Lang, and Peter A. Farrell

Noll Physiological Research Center, Pennsylvania State University, University Park 16802; and Department of Cellular and Molecular Physiology, Pennsylvania State University College of Medicine, Hershey, Pennsylvania 17033

These studies examined whether passive immunization against insulin-like growth factor I (IGF-I) would prevent increases in rates of protein synthesis in skeletal muscle of diabetic rats after resistance exercise. Male Sprague-Dawley rats were pancreatectomized and randomly assigned to either an exercise or a sedentary group. Animals in each of these groups received either an IGF-I antibody or a nonspecific IgG from a subcutaneous osmotic pump. Exercise did not change plasma or gastrocnemius IGF-I concentrations in nondiabetic rats. However, plasma and muscle IGF-I concentrations were higher in IgG-treated diabetic rats that exercised compared with respective sedentary groups (P < 0.05). Passively immunized diabetic rats did not exhibit the same exercise-induced increase in IGF-I concentrations. In nondiabetic rats, protein synthesis rates were higher after exercise in both control and immunized groups. In diabetic rats, exercise increased protein synthesis in the IgG-treated animals but not in those treated with IGF-I antibody. There was also a significant positive correlation between both plasma and gastrocnemius IGF-I concentrations and rates of protein synthesis in diabetic (P < 0.01), but not nondiabetic, rats. These results suggest that IGF-I is compensatory for insulin in hypoinsulinemic rats by facilitating an anabolic response after acute resistance exercise.

anabolism; growth factors; hypoinsulinemia


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