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Journal of Endocrinology (1989) 123, 33-39    DOI: 10.1677/joe.0.1230033
© 1989 Society for Endocrinology

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Comparison of the effects of administration of recombinant bovine growth hormone or N-Met insulin-like growth factor-I to lactating goats

S. R. Davis, P. D. Gluckman, S. C. Hodgkinson, V. C. Farr, B. H. Breier and B. D. Burleigh

Five goats were injected with GH (15 mg/day), three goats received systemic infusions of insulin-like growth factor (IGF)-I (43 nmol/h) and four goats received systemic infusions of physiological saline (20 ml/h) on days 4–6 of a 10-day experimental period during mid-lactation.

Milk yield increased by an average of 24% in GH-treated goats by the time of the third injection. In contrast, milk yield of IGF-I-infused goats did not differ from saline-infused animals although two of three goats did show a small increase (12%) after 36 h of IGF-I infusion.

With GH and IGF-I treatments plasma IGF-I concentrations increased similarly, reaching maxima of 100–130 nmol/l within 24 h. Plasma IGF-I concentration was relatively constant in saline-infused goats at about 50 nmol/l throughout the experiment.

Total IGF-I bound to 50 kDa and 150 kDa binding proteins in plasma was increased by GH and IGF-I treatments but, in contrast to IGF-I, GH increased the proportion of IGF-I bound to 150 kDa binding protein.

In a second experiment, four goats received systemic infusion of IGF-I (43 nmol/h) and four goats received systemic infusion of physiological saline (20 ml/h). There was no evidence that milk yield was changed during IGF-I infusion. However, when those goats which had previously received IGF-I infusions were injected with GH, milk yield increased by 30%. While the increment in plasma IGF-I concentration during IGF-I infusion was similar to that obtained in the first experiment, the IGF-I response to GH injection was much greater, plasma concentrations rising to 230 nmol/l.

The data show a lack of milk yield response in goats whose plasma IGF-I concentrations were increased by IGF-I administration. Systemic infusion of IGF-I appears to be ineffective as a means of procuring a sustained increase in milk production.

Journal of Endocrinology (1989) 123, 33–39




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