Cellular growth in organs of dwarf mice during treatment with growth hormone, thyroxine and plasma fractions containing somatomedin activity

1982 ◽  
Vol 99 (1) ◽  
pp. 150-160 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sylvia van Buul-Offers ◽  
Jan Leo Van den Brande ◽  
L. Dumoleijn ◽  
M. Feijlbrief ◽  
C. M. Hoogerbrugge ◽  
...  

Abstract. DNA, RNA and protein content of the liver, kidneys and spleen were studied in dwarf mice during treatment with human growth hormone (hGH), thyroxine and plasma fractions containing somatomedin activity (SM-P1 and SM-P4). This investigation has revealed that part of the growth of the liver and all growth of the spleen obtained with the administered preparations, are a consequence of nuclear division. Cell enlargement is not induced in the spleen by either of the preparations used. In the liver a small degree of hypertrophy is obtained with SM-P1. In the kidney both cell number and cell size are stimulated by thyroxine and to a lesser extent by hGH and SM-P1. With regards to the RNA content per cell an increase is obtained with hGH and thyroxine in the liver and in the kidneys also with SM-P1, but not in the spleen. These data demonstrate that semi-purified SM-preparations, like hGH and thyroxine, might be potent stimuli for the restoration of the impaired nucleic acid metabolism in these organs of the Snell dwarf mouse.

1985 ◽  
Vol 17 (01) ◽  
pp. 20-24 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sylvia van Buul-Offers ◽  
J. L. Van den Brande

Endocrinology ◽  
2003 ◽  
Vol 144 (6) ◽  
pp. 2553-2558 ◽  
Author(s):  
Raoul P. A. Rooman ◽  
Gilliam Kuijpers ◽  
Ria Gresnigt ◽  
Ruud Bloemen ◽  
Johanna G. Koster ◽  
...  

1982 ◽  
Vol 92 (3) ◽  
pp. 405-407 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. A. PHILLIPS ◽  
W. G. BEAMER ◽  
A. BARTKE

Restriction endonuclease analysis of genomic DNA was carried out for three types of dwarf mice (Little, Ames dwarf and Snell dwarf) that have genetic defects in GH expression. We found the GH genes to be present in homozygotes for each mutant allele as well as in their control litter-mates. These three types of dwarf mice may be useful in studying the molecular basis of inherited GH deficiency and as models for analogous genetic disorders of human GH expression.


Parasitology ◽  
1983 ◽  
Vol 87 (3) ◽  
pp. 447-453 ◽  
Author(s):  
K. Shiwaku ◽  
K. Hirai ◽  
M. Torii ◽  
T. Tsuboi

SummarySnell normal and dwarf mice were infected with Spirometra erinacei plerocercoids collected in Japan, to investigate the relationship between the growth-promoting effects of plerocercoids and the growth hormone releasing factor and the somatostatin – growth hormone – somatomedin axis in the host. Infection with plerocercoids caused increases in body weight and weights of muscle, liver, spleen and heart in the normal male mice, and increases in the head–body length, body weight and weights of muscle, liver, spleen, kidney and heart in the normal female mice, but did not increase the weight of the fat pad. Infection with plerocercoids caused increases in body weights and weights of muscle, liver and spleen in the male dwarf mice, and increases in the head–body length, body weight and weights of muscle, liver, spleen and kidney in the female dwarf mice. These observations suggest that plerocercoids promote the growth of dwarf mice as well as normal mice. As the dwarfism of Snell mice is due to a defective anterior pituitary gland, it seems that plerocercoids do not stimulate secretion of growth hormone from the pituitary. Accordingly, it seems to be more probable that the larvae secrete a growth hormone-like substance.


1990 ◽  
Vol 24 (2) ◽  
pp. 183-186 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. Hau ◽  
O. M. Poulsen ◽  
N. F. Dagnæs Hansen ◽  
K. R. Worm

1988 ◽  
Vol 117 (1) ◽  
pp. 85-90 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. T. Holder ◽  
J. A. Blows ◽  
R. Aston ◽  
P. C. Bates

ABSTRACT Dwarf mice were treated for 10 days with phosphate-buffered saline (PBS), human growth hormone (hGH) or hGH with monoclonal antibody EB1 (hGH/MAB-EB1); for each treatment there were three groups which received 50, 75 or 100% of the amount of food eaten when available ad libitum. The PBS control groups lost more or gained less weight than equivalent groups receiving hGH alone, and mice given hGH/MAB-EB1 showed a greater weight gain than those in comparable groups receiving hGH alone. When weight gain or loss was expressed as g/g food eaten, groups treated with hGH gained more or lost less than the PBS groups. Similarly, weight gain/g food was significantly greater in hGH/MAB-EB1 animals than in the comparable groups given hGH alone. A similar pattern of response was observed for increases in tail length and uptake of 35SO42− into costal cartilage in vivo. For mice given hGH alone, fat content was decreased compared with that in the equivalent group given PBS, and mice treated with hGH/MAB-EB1 had less fat than the equivalent group given hGH alone. Administration of hGH alone caused a concomitant increase in protein content and body weight such that, compared with mice given PBS, there was no significant increase in protein as a proportion of body weight. However, hGH/MAB-EB1 caused an increase in whole body protein which was significantly greater than that for the equivalent group given hGH alone, when expressed as per cent body weight. Monoclonal antibody EB1 has been shown to enhance the actions of hGH on growth and body composition in Snell dwarf mice and to increase food conversion efficiency. J. Endocr. (1988) 117,85–90


Endocrinology ◽  
2004 ◽  
Vol 145 (12) ◽  
pp. 5656-5664 ◽  
Author(s):  
C. J. Phelps

Abstract Both Snell (Pit-1dw or dwj, dw/dw) and Ames (Prophet of Pit-1df, df/df) dwarf mice fail to produce prolactin (PRL) as well as GH due to deficient transcription factor Pit-1 activity and have reduced numbers of hypothalamic PRL-inhibiting area A12 tuberoinfundibular dopaminergic (TIDA) neurons. It has been reported that the TIDA deficit in Ames dwarf mice develops postnatally as a reduction in number after an initial increase that is comparable to that of normal siblings. The present study was designed to characterize A12 TIDA neuronal development in the Snell dwarf (dw/dw) compared with littermate normal mice. Brains of normal (DW/?) and dwj/dwj mice were examined at 7, 14, 21, 30, and ≥ 60 postnatal days (d) by catecholamine fluorescence and quantification of neuron number after tyrosine hydroxylase immunostaining in dopaminergic (DA) areas A12, A13 (medial zona incerta), and A14 (periventricular nucleus). Fluorescence was less in dw/dw than in DW/? A12 perikarya and median eminence but was not reduced in other DA areas, such as substantia nigra, at all ages; A12 fluorescence was virtually absent in Snell dwarf adults. Numbers of TIDA neurons were comparable in normal and Snell dwarf mice at 7 d. In normal (DW/?) mice, A12 neurons increased in number to adult levels at 14 d and were significantly higher than in Snell dwarf (dw/dw) mice at 14 d (P < 0.05) and at subsequent ages (P < 0.01). In Snell dwarf mice, numbers of A12 neurons did not differ at 7, 14, and 21 d, decreased at 30 d (P < 0.05), and reached, at 60 d, 23% of the population in normal sibling mice (P < 0.01 compared with earlier ages). Neuron numbers in nonhypophysiotropic DA area A13 did not vary with age or phenotype. In A14, cell number was higher in both phenotypes at 14 d (P < 0.05 for DW/?; P < 0.01 for dw/dw); neuron number was lower in dw/dw than in DW/? mice at 30 d (P < 0.05) and 60 d (P < 0.01). Thus, compared with normal mice of the same strain, the A12 deficit is more severe in Snell (dw/dw) than in Ames (df/df) dwarf hypothalamus (48% of DF/?), as previously reported, and develops as a decline from the population present at 7 d rather than first increasing. A reduction in A14 neuron number also occurs in the Snell dwarf. Treatment of DW/dw- and dw/dw-containing litters with ovine PRL (50 μg/d, ip), beginning at 12 or 7 d and continuing until 42 d, resulted in TIDA neuron numbers in Snell dwarfs that were lower than those in normal siblings (P < 0.01 for both) but were higher than in untreated adult dwarfs and comparable to the TIDA population size in dwarfs at 7 d, indicating that PRL maintained this maximal number and prevented TIDA neuron dedifferentiation, which occurs in dwarf postnatal development.


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