Md. Warner et al., GROWTH-HORMONE AND PROLACTIN VARIANTS IN NORMAL SUBJECTS - RELATIVE PROPORTIONS IN MORNING AND AFTERNOON SAMPLES, Hormone and Metabolic Research, 25(8), 1993, pp. 425-429
There are multiple molecular forms of both growth hormone (GH) and pro
lactin (PRL). Traditionally the two hormones have been measured by rad
ioimmunoassay (RIA) techniques. Recently, several molecular variants o
f these hormones have been discovered using Western blotting technique
s: four GH size variants, 27K GH, 22K GH (the classical form), 20K GH
(an alternatively-spliced form), and 17K GH, and two PRL structural va
riants, a glycosylated (G-PRL) and a nonglycosylated form. In this stu
dy, we measured these GH and PRL variants in 18 normal subjects in the
morning in a fasting state and in the afternoon in a non-fasting stat
e. Contrary to expectations, the predominant serum GH form in both mor
ning and afternoon samples was found to be 17K, not 22K GH, accounting
for 82-89% of the total circulating GH. The predominant serum PRL for
m was found to be the nonglycosylated variant, constituting 83-84% of
the total circulating PRL. None of the GH or PRL variants were signifi
cantly different when comparing morning to afternoon samples. These re
sults provide, for the first time, evidence for the existence of two n
ew GH-immunoreactive components in human sera, the 17K and 27K GH, the
former in proportions often higher than those of the classical 22K GH
, and argue for the need to measure them individually.