Local expression of human growth hormone in bone results in impaired mechanical integrity in the skeletal tissue of transgenic mice

The effect of local production of human growth hormone on murine cortical bone was investigated using a transgenic mouse model. Femora and humeri from human growth hormone transgenic mice and littermate control mice were obtained, and the geometrical, biomechanical, compositional, and histomorphometric properties of all specimens were determined. The goals were to investigate the effects of local expression of human growth hormone on skeletal integrity, including the functional geometry of long bone and its related structural and mechanical behavior, as well as tissue composition and integrity. As expected, local production of human growth hormone by osteoblasts indeed resulted in longer femora with significantly greater mid‐diaphyseal cross‐sectional geometry in the transgenic mice (16% increase in cross‐sectional area and 29% increase in bending moments of inertia). However, the significant increase in geometry was not associated with a proportional increase in bending stiffness and other structural properties, which suggested that the mechanical properties of the cortical bone tissue may have been inferior. Microspecimen bending tests verified this prediction, given that transgenic cortical bone tissue had significantly lower apparent elastic modulus and ultimate strength (52 and 68%, respectively, of control values). These defects in the whole bone structural and tissue mechanical properties of transgenic specimens were associated with a smaller fraction of ash, larger fractions of woven bone and cartilage islands, and greater porosity in the mid‐diaphyseal cortices. These results suggest that local production of human growth hormone by osteoblasts is indeed anabolic for bone, but at the expense of bone tissue integrity.

[1]  J. Tobias,et al.  Growth hormone deficiency during puberty reduces adult bone mineral density. , 1992, Archives of disease in childhood.

[2]  M K Mansoura,et al.  A murine skeletal adaptation that significantly increases cortical bone mechanical properties. Implications for human skeletal fragility. , 1993, The Journal of clinical investigation.

[3]  John D. Currey,et al.  The Mechanical Adaptations of Bones , 1984 .

[4]  S. Goldstein,et al.  Evaluation of a microcomputed tomography system to study trabecular bone structure , 1990, Journal of orthopaedic research : official publication of the Orthopaedic Research Society.

[5]  A. Lindahl,et al.  Action of Growth Hormone: Current Views , 1988, Acta paediatrica Scandinavica. Supplement.

[6]  L. Mosekilde,et al.  Growth Hormone (GH) and Adult Bone Remodeling: The Potential Use of GH in Treatment of Osteoporosis , 1993, The Journal of pediatric endocrinology.

[7]  H. Sjöberg,et al.  Potent effect of recombinant growth hormone on bone mineral density and body composition in adults with panhypopituitarism. , 1992, Acta endocrinologica.

[8]  D. Enlow Handbook of facial growth , 1975 .

[9]  A. Villanueva,et al.  Identification of the mineralization front: comparison of a modified toluidine blue stain with tetracycline fluorescence. , 1983, Metabolic bone disease & related research.

[10]  D. Burr,et al.  Stiffness of compact bone: effects of porosity and density. , 1988, Journal of biomechanics.

[11]  A. Biewener Allometry of quadrupedal locomotion: the scaling of duty factor, bone curvature and limb orientation to body size. , 1983, The Journal of experimental biology.

[12]  R. Whitehouse,et al.  Increased bone density after recombinant human growth hormone (GH) therapy in adults with isolated GH deficiency. , 1993, The Journal of clinical endocrinology and metabolism.

[13]  E. Froesch,et al.  Growth hormone dependent stimulation of osteoblast-like cells in serum-free cultures via local synthesis of insulin-like growth factor I. , 1988, Biochemical and biophysical research communications.

[14]  S. Melmed,et al.  Biochemical assessment of bone formation and resorption in acromegaly. , 1993, The Journal of clinical endocrinology and metabolism.

[15]  R. Taylor,et al.  Osteoblast-specific expression of growth hormone stimulates bone growth in transgenic mice , 1992, Molecular and cellular biology.