Insulin receptors and insulin-like growth factor I receptors are functional during organogenesis of the lens

1990 
Abstract Insulin and insulin-like growth factor I (IGF-I) stimulate overall growth and development of the chick embryo in early organogenesis. Turning to individual organs, to clarify the cellular effects of these peptides and the activity of the receptors involved, we had demonstrated with developing lens that insulin and IGF-I increase the accumulation of δ-crystallin mRNA, a marker for lens differentiation, in part by stimulation of transcription. In this study we expand our previous work on lens receptors to an earlier time in organogenesis, day 4, which marks the beginning of differentiation of the lens epithelial cells into elongated fibers. Insulin receptors are demonstrable by affinity cross-linking in epithelial cells at day 6, and specific binding of [ 125 I]insulin and [ 125 I]IGF-I is detectable in day 4 lenses. Insulin and IGF-I stimulation of substrate phosphorylation in the presence of solubilized receptors occurs only with high concentrations (10–100 nM) of either peptide in day 4 lenses, while a clear response with low concentrations (1 nM) is elicited by day 6 of development. Low concentrations of both insulin and IGF-I (0.1–1 nM) increase the incorporation of [ 3 H]leucine and [ 3 H]uridine in day 6 lens cells, suggesting that each peptide acts through its own receptor. These results confirm and extend the finding of insulin and IGF-I receptors in the developing chicken lens, and demonstrate their functional activity. This embryonic model should be valuable for further analysis of the action of insulin and IGF-I in growth and differentiation processes during early development.
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