Growth hormone (GH) is primarily produced in the pituitary gland, although GH gene expression also occurs in the central and autonomic nervous systems. GH-immunoreactive proteins are abundant in the brain, spinal cord, and peripheral nerves. The appearance of GH in these tissues occurs prior to the ontogenic differentiation of the pituitary gland and prior to the presence of GH in systemic circulation. Neural GH is also present in neonates, juveniles, and adults and is independent of changes in pituitary GH secretion. Neural GH is therefore likely to have local roles in neural development or neural function, especially as GH receptors (GHRs) are widespread in the nervous system. In recent studies, GH mRNA and GH immunoreactive proteins have been identified in the neural retina of embryonic chicks. GH immunoreactivity is present in the optic cup of chick embryos at embryonic day (ED) 3 of the 21-d incubation period. It is widespread in the neural retina by ED 7 but also present in the nonpigmented retina, choroid, sclera, and cornea. This immunoreactivity is associated with proteins in the neural retina comparable in size with those in the adult pituitary gland, although it is primarily associated with 15-16 kDa moieties rather than with the full-length molecule of approximately 22 kDa. These small GH moieties may reflect proteolytic fragments of "monomer" GH and (or) the presence of different GH gene transcripts, since full-length and truncated GH cDNAs are present in retinal tissue extracts. The GH immunoreactivity in the retina persists throughout embryonic development but is not present in juvenile birds (after 6 weeks of age). This immunoreactivity is also associated with the presence of GH receptor (GHR) immunoreactivity and GHR mRNA in ocular tissues of chick embryos. The retina is thus an extrapituitary site of GH gene expression during early development and is probably an autocrine or paracrine site of GH action. The marked ontogenic pattern of GH immunoreactivity in the retina suggests hitherto unsuspected roles for GH in neurogenesis or ocular development.
It is well-established that growth hormone (GH) is present in the brain, spinal cord, and peripheral nerves of embryonic chicks, prior to the differentiation of pituitary somatotrophs, but its presence and distribution in retinal tissues is controversial. The possible presence of GH and GH mRNA in retinal tissues of early embryos has therefore been further evaluated. A 466-bp fragment of the pituitary GH cDNA, derived from a portion of exon 3 and spanning exons 4 and 5, was amplified by RT-PCR from reverse-transcribed mRNA from the pituitary glands of juvenile chicks and from the whole eye, neural retina, and retinal pigmented epithelium (RPE) of embryonic-day (ED) 9 chick embryos. In ED 9 embryos, GH immunoreactivity was demonstrated in the choroid and neural retina, in which it was particularly abundant in a layer of cells with the location and morphological appearance of retinal ganglion cells. GH immunoreactivity was also present in tissue sections of the RPE that were bleached to remove the melanin pigment. The intense GH staining in the RPE of ED 9 embryos was also revealed using a fluorescein-labeled GH antibody and confocal microscopy. At the ultrastructural level, GH detected by immunogold electron microscopy was present in the cytoplasm of RPE and neural retinal cells of ED 9 embryos. Although not associated with secretory granules, GH in the RPE was particularly associated with the membranes of the melanin granules. These results demonstrate that the neural retina and RPE are extrapituitary sites of GH production in early chick embryos, prior to the differentiation of the pituitary gland.
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