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Somatotropin (GH for Growth Hormone or HGH for Human Growth Hormone) is a polypeptide hormone produced by the somatotropic cells of the pituitary gland. The human growth hormone complex, a protein circulating in the blood, consists of five similiar genes located over a distance of 50 kbp on the long arm of chromosome 17 [1]. There it gets encoded by the Growth hormone 1 gene along with four other related genes (hGH-N, hCS-A, hCS-B, hGH-V [1], [1])[2]. Three of these genes are encoding human chorionic somatomammotropin, which is closely related to somatotropin. They are all in the same transcriptional orientation [2]. GH is one of the best known pleiotropic hormones [3].

Functions

Somatropin plays an important role in physiological environments such as: increasing muscle mass, reducing fat mass, providing the energy necessary for tissue growth, maintaining the right level of glucose and lipids and the development of the individual's body [3]. It acts directly on a cell surface or indirectly. In the second case, somatotropin stimulates tissues such as the liver, which in turn allows the synthesis and secretion of IGF-1, thus enabling the development of cell growth, tissue, bone and thus the linear growth of the individual.[4] The GH regulates direct or indirect anabolic and growth promoting actions. Through direct regulation GH increases the amino acid uptake, the RNA- ,protein- and cartilage-synthesis and muscle growth. These regulations are often mediated by IFG. [4] However, the GH is also able to regulate catabolic actions. Thus it stimulates the breakdown of lipids (lipolysis) as is evident by increased fatty acids. A lack of GH is therefore associated with an increased lipid deposit. [5] GH can be regulated by various factors. The hypothalamus secretes hormones, like the GH releasing factor (GHR) or hormone (GHRH) which can stimulate the pituitary cells and activate different signal transduction cascades. On the other hand, it produces the hormone Somatostatin (SS) which inhibits the GH secretion by blocking the adenylate cyclase (AC). However, not the GH expression. It can also prevent the release of GHRH fom the hypthalamus. In addition, can be inhibited by feedback regulation. It stimulates the steroid and thyroid synthesis which migrate back and inhibit GH. Other regulating factors are environmental influences and the nutritional state. [6]

Somatotropin : Growth Hormon(HGH)

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