A. Logan et al., COORDINATED PATTERN OF EXPRESSION AND LOCALIZATION OF INSULIN-LIKE GROWTH FACTOR-II (IGF-II) AND IGF-BINDING PROTEIN-2 IN THE ADULT-RAT BRAIN, Endocrinology, 135(5), 1994, pp. 2255-2264
Insulin-like growth factors (IGFs) have numerous actions on neuronal a
nd glial cell function in vitro, although their in vivo roles within t
he central nervous system (CNS) remain undefined. Levels of IGF-II are
high in most rat tissues before the third postnatal week, but rapidly
decrease thereafter, except in the brain and spinal cord, where eleva
ted titers are present in the adult. This suggests a function of IGF-I
I within the CNS. IGF-binding proteins (IGFBPs) modify the type 1 IGF
receptor-mediated activity of IGFs, thereby regulating the activities
of IGF-II in the CNS. In this study, we use a ribonuclease protection
assay, in situ hybridization, and immunohistochemistry to demonstrate
that IGF-II and one of the major CNS binding proteins, IGFBP-2, show a
striking congruency in their anatomical pattern of expression and loc
alization throughout the adult rat brain. Both proteins are synthesize
d predominantly in the leptomeninges, choroid plexus, and parenchymal
microvasculature, but become localized, remote from the site of synthe
sis, in the myelin sheaths of individual myelinated axons and in all o
f the myelinated nerve tracts in the brain, which presumably represent
s the site of IGF-II bioactivity. The spatial disparity between sites
of synthesis and sites of bioactivity suggests a key role for IGFBP-2
in the regulation of IGF-II bioavailability within the brain.