Tj. Roberts et al., INTERACTION OF INSULIN AND SOMATOTROPIN ON BODY-WEIGHT GAIN, FEED-INTAKE, AND BODY-COMPOSITION IN RATS, The American journal of physiology, 267(2), 1994, pp. 50000293-50000299
This study investigated the interaction of insulin and somatotropin on
body weight gain and feed conversion in rats. Female rats (initial wt
215 g) were assigned to one of the following four treatments for a 2-
wk period: 1) control; 2) 40 U protamine zinc insulin.kg(-1)day(-1); 3
) 2 mg/day somatotropin; 4) insulin + somatotropin. Relative to the co
ntrol group (gain, 1.4 g/day; intake, 16.7 g/day) insulin stimulated t
he rate of gain (250%), feed intake (73%), and fat pad weight (215%).
Insulin caused a 270% increase in carcass fat and a 30% increase in ca
rcass protein. Somatotropin also increased gain (178% but did not have
a significant effect on intake or fat pad weight. Somatotropin increa
sed carcass protein 28% but had no effect an carcass fat. The greatest
stimulation of body weight gain (392%) was observed with the insulin
plus somatotropin combination treatment, indicating an additive effect
. There were also additive effects on protein accretion and organ weig
hts. However, feed intake and carcass fat in the combination group wer
e intermediate between that of the control and insulin alone groups, i
ndicating that somatotropin attenuated the ability of insulin to stimu
late these parameters. These results indicate that certain effects of
insulin and somatotropin, such as the promotion of lean tissue accreti
on, are additive, whereas other effects, such as those associated with
Lipid metabolism, oppose each other.