Effects of bovine growth hormone analogs on mouse skeletal muscle structure.
Growth Dev Aging
; 59(3): 121-8, 1995.
Article
in En
| MEDLINE
| ID: mdl-8675366
ABSTRACT
Skeletal muscles of transgenic mice expressing altered bovine growth hormones (bGH) have been compared with those of nontransgenic mice to determine whether muscle fiber type-specific responses or histopathologies are associated with the altered gene. The slow soleus and predominantly fast gastrocnemius muscles were prepared for myofibrillar ATPase activity (to determine muscle fiber type) and histological examination from mice that were either giant (M4 line), larger than normal (M11 line), dwarf (G119K line), or nontransgenic (NTC). No histopathology was observed in any of the muscles. Although body weights were significantly different between all four lines of mice, only the giant M4 mice had significantly larger muscle fibers than the other lines of mice, while neither the G119K nor M11 lines were significantly different from the NTC for either muscle. No fiber type-specific differences were noted. These results suggest that the different muscles are the product of differences in numbers of muscle fibers expressed in the G119K and M11 lines of mice; the increase in body mass matched the fiber size growth only in the giant M4 line. Therefore, the altered bGH genes may be acting on fetal liver and myoblast/myotube GH receptors to change the GH and IGF-I regulated pattern of muscle development, and eventually, to determine the adult muscle fiber numbers.
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Collection:
01-internacional
Database:
MEDLINE
Main subject:
Growth Hormone
/
Muscle, Skeletal
Limits:
Animals
Language:
En
Journal:
Growth Dev Aging
Journal subject:
FISIOLOGIA
Year:
1995
Document type:
Article
Affiliation country: