Can "big" insulin-like growth factor II in serum of tumor patients account for the development of extrapancreatic tumor hypoglycemia?

Abstract
The pathogenesis of extrapancreatic tumor hypoglycemia has been related to the secretion of big insulin-like growth factor (IGF) II by the tumor. In 25 of 28 patients with this type of hypoglycemia we found 1.5-8-fold elevated serum levels of immunoreactive big (15-25 kD), but decreased levels of normal IGF II. After removal of the tumor, big IGF II disappeared and normal IGF II increased. Tumors contained elevated levels of IGF II, 65-80% in the big form. The insulin-like bioactivity of big IGF II and its affinity towards IGF-binding proteins (IGFBP)-2 and -3 are similar to those of normal IGF II, but two- to threefold higher on a molar basis. Big IGF II is mainly bound to the 50-kD IGFBP complex. The latter contains approximately 10 times more of this peptide than in normal serum and displays three- to fourfold increased insulin-like bioactivity. The formation of the 150-kD IGFBP complex with 125I-recombinant human IGFBP-3 is impaired in tumor serum. This results in sequestration of IGFBP-3 and predominant association of big IGF II with IGFBP-2 and -3 in the 50-kD complex. Increased bioavailability of big IGF II in this complex due to unrestricted capillary passage and enhanced insulin bioactivity of this big IGF II pool provide a continuous increased insulin-like potential available to insulin and type 1 IGF receptors of insulin-sensitive tissues and thus may lead to sustained hypoglycemia.

This publication has 37 references indexed in Scilit: