Am J Physiol Gastrointest Liver Physiol
July 2005
IGF-II gut drives mucosal growth during gestation. IGF binding protein-2 (IGFBP-2) has a high affinity for IGF-II and tightly regulates IGF-II availability during fetal and early neonatal growth. We have previously demonstrated that glucocorticoids alter IGF homeostasis in the neonatal ileum, but the mechanism(s) by which this occurs is poorly understood.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: IEC-18 cells are a non-transformed, immortal cell line derived from juvenile rat ileal crypt cells. They may have experimental advantages over tumor-derived gastrointestinal lineages, including preservation of phenotype, normal endocrine responses and retention of differentiation potential. However, their proclivity for spontaneous differentiation/transformation may be stereotypical and could represent a more profound experimental confounder than previously realized.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe have previously hypothesized that IGF-I is a mediator of dexamethasone (DEX) effect in the newborn mouse ileum-a model designed to mimic the precocious mucosal maturation associated with spontaneous ileal perforations in extremely premature neonates. We have further investigated this hypothesis using in vivo and in vitro models of accelerated epithelial migration (a transient property, temporally associated with mucosal maturation). These experiments include a steroid-treatment model comparing IGF-I immunolocalization with bromo-deoxyuridine (BrdU)-pulse-labeling, as a means of assessing epithelial cell migration, within the ileum of newborn mice that received either daily intraperitoneal injections of DEX (1 microg/gm) or vehicle.
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