AI Article Synopsis

  • Growth hormone is crucial for growth and metabolism, and mutations in the growth hormone receptor in mice lead to obesity and insulin resistance due to altered STAT5 signaling.
  • Metabolic analysis using advanced techniques like NMR showed significant differences in the urinary and liver metabolite profiles among mutant and wild-type mice, highlighting changes in lipid and choline metabolism.
  • The study's findings link changes in metabolite levels to gene expression alterations, outlining the complex metabolic shifts caused by impaired STAT5 signaling, particularly affecting liver metabolism.

Article Abstract

Background: Growth hormone is an important regulator of post-natal growth and metabolism. We have investigated the metabolic consequences of altered growth hormone signalling in mutant mice that have truncations at position 569 and 391 of the intracellular domain of the growth hormone receptor, and thus exhibit either low (around 30% maximum) or no growth hormone-dependent STAT5 signalling respectively. These mutations result in altered liver metabolism, obesity and insulin resistance.

Methodology/principal Findings: The analysis of metabolic changes was performed using microarray analysis of liver tissue and NMR metabonomics of urine and liver tissue. Data were analyzed using multivariate statistics and Gene Ontology tools. The metabolic profiles characteristic for each of the two mutant groups and wild-type mice were identified with NMR metabonomics. We found decreased urinary levels of taurine, citrate and 2-oxoglutarate, and increased levels of trimethylamine, creatine and creatinine when compared to wild-type mice. These results indicate significant changes in lipid and choline metabolism, and were coupled with increased fat deposition, leading to obesity. The microarray analysis identified changes in expression of metabolic enzymes correlating with alterations in metabolite concentration both in urine and liver. Similarity of mutant 569 to the wild-type was seen in young mice, but the pattern of metabolites shifted to that of the 391 mutant as the 569 mice became obese after six months age.

Conclusions/significance: The metabonomic observations were consistent with the parallel analysis of gene expression and pathway mapping using microarray data, identifying metabolites and gene transcripts involved in hepatic metabolism, especially for taurine, choline and creatinine metabolism. The systems biology approach applied in this study provides a coherent picture of metabolic changes resulting from impaired STAT5 signalling by the growth hormone receptor, and supports a potentially important role for taurine in enhancing beta-oxidation.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2447874PMC
http://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0002764PLOS

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