Insulin-like growth factor binding protein-1 is elevated in patients with polycythemia vera and stimulates erythroid burst formation in vitro.

Autor: Mirza AM; Department of Anatomy and Cell Biology, University of Toronto, Ontario, Canada., Ezzat S, Axelrad AA
Jazyk: angličtina
Zdroj: Blood [Blood] 1997 Mar 15; Vol. 89 (6), pp. 1862-9.
Abstrakt: Previously, we found that, in the myeloproliferative disorder polycythemia vera (PV), circulating erythroid progenitor cells were hypersensitive to insulin-like growth factor I (IGF-I), an effect shown to occur through the IGF-I receptor. Also, in cells of PV patients, the IGF-I receptor was hyperphosphorylated on tyrosine residues under basal conditions, and its tyrosine phosphorylation in response to exogenous IGF-I was strongly augmented. Thus, because IGF-I appeared to play a role in the pathogenesis of PV, we wished to assess its level in the circulation of these patients. Normally, most of the circulating IGF-I is bound to specific high-affinity IGF binding proteins that can regulate its activity. We determined the circulating levels of IGF-I and two of its key binding proteins, IGFBP-1 and IGFBP-3. In two separate experiments, plasma samples from a total of 23 PV patients age- and sex-matched with 41 normal individuals were compared by radioimmunoassay. The levels of IGFBP-1 in patients with PV (37.80 +/- 4.33 microg/L) were more than fourfold higher than in normals (9.34 +/- 1.34 microg/L) or patients with secondary erythrocytosis (9.47 +/- 1.96 microg/L), whereas the plasma concentrations of IGFBP-3 and IGF-I in these patients were similar to those of normal subjects. Because circulating IGFBP-1 levels may be influenced by insulin, we measured the concentrations of insulin in the same samples. Our data showed that the elevation of circulating IGFBP-1 in PV could not be attributed to low levels of insulin in these patients. The substantial increase in concentration of IGFBP-1 was confirmed on ligand blots performed with (125)I-IGF-I. IGFBP-1 can be either inhibitory or stimulatory to the action of IGF-I under different conditions. We reasoned that if IGFBP-1 were stimulatory for erythropoiesis, an elevated IGFBP-1 level could help to explain the increased sensitivity to IGF-I observed in PV. If IGFBP-1 were inhibitory, it might suggest a compensatory mechanism in which a hyperphosphorylated IGF-I receptor in PV might induce a negative modulator of IGF-I action, in this case IGFBP-1. To distinguish between these two hypotheses, we titrated the effect of IGFBP-1 in the presence of IGF-I with respect to erythroid burst formation and found that IGFBP-1 was strikingly stimulatory. The elevated level of IGFBP-1 coupled with its ability to stimulate erythroid burst formation provide an attractive mechanism to account for the increased sensitivity of erythroid progenitor cells to IGF-I and the consequent overproduction of red blood cells characteristic of PV.
Databáze: MEDLINE