These tools will no longer be maintained as of December 31, 2024. Archived website can be found here. PubMed4Hh GitHub repository can be found here. Contact NLM Customer Service if you have questions.
Pubmed for Handhelds
PUBMED FOR HANDHELDS
Search MEDLINE/PubMed
Title: Skeletal muscle growth of oMTla-oGH transgenic mice. Author: Sharma A, Lee YB, Murray JD, Oberbauer AM. Journal: Growth Dev Aging; 1996; 60(1):31-41. PubMed ID: 8718928. Abstract: Forty-eight transgenic mice carrying an ovine metallothionein 1a-ovine growth hormone (oMTla-oGH) transgene and 48 littermate control mice were used to investigate the effect of GH transgene on the growth and biochemical characteristics of skeletal muscle. Transgene expression was initiated in the transgenic mice by the addition of zinc sulfate to the water at 21 d of age; control mice were also supplemented with zinc sulfate. These mice were maintained on zinc sulfate until 84 d of age. Groups of mice (16 controls, 16 transgenics) were killed at 21, 42 and 84 d of age and muscles from the hind leg were dissected, weighed and analyzed. At 84 d, male transgenics were 32% heavier than controls, while female transgenics were 47% heavier. Transgenic mice of both sexes had smaller (p < 0.01) muscles than controls at weaning (21 d). In spite of significantly heavier body weights of transgenic mice at 84 d of age, there were no significant differences in muscle weights. This was due to a significantly lower (p < 0.01) proportion of muscle, expressed as percentages of body weights, in transgenic mice compared with controls. Higher DNA and RNA concentrations at 42 d of age and elevated cathepsins C and H activities at 42 and 84 d of age indicate that muscle protein metabolism is more active in transgenic mice, which are growing at a greater rate than controls from weaning to 84 d of age. The fact that oMTla-oGH transgenic mice inherently have a lower proportion of muscle, compared to controls and that this proportion does not change in spite of transgene activation and 30 fold increase in plasma GH levels, suggests the hypothesis that muscle growth may be controlled by locally produced IGFs, which are essentially independent of circulating GH concentrations.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]