Annals of Clinical and Laboratory Science, Vol 16, Issue 5, 412-418
Copyright © 1986 by Association of Clinical Scientists
Temporal relation between a hepatic erythropoietic factor and the site of rat erythropoietin production
BS Dornfest,
BA Naughton,
RA Preti,
ML Huie,
and
AS Gordon
Serum borne hepatic erythropoietic factor (HEF), which can stimulate hepatic erythropoietin (Ep) production in the adult rat, is found at elevated levels in the serum of partially hepatectomized rats and of rats subjected to hepatotoxic injury. It is also detected in sera of patients with liver disease. The purpose of the present study was to determine whether or not HEF activity is increased in the serum of the normal neonatal rat at a time when the liver is the primary site of Ep production. Our results show significantly increased HEF activity in the serum of young rats during the second to fifth weeks of life. Negligible activity was detected in rats over five weeks of age. In the rat, the kidney is reported to begin producing Ep by the third week of life and by the eighth week the kidney is the major site of synthesis with liver production at this age significantly diminished. Thus, our findings show a temporal relation between HEF activity in the serum and the reported transition from liver to kidney production of Ep.