| Research Area: |
Muscle Alterations and Atrophy |
| Principal Investigator: |
Robert J. Schwartz, Ph.D. |
| Organization: |
Baylor College of Medicine |
| Project Title: |
GH/IGF-I Transgene Expression on Muscle Homeostasis |
| Funding Period: |
1997-2000 |
|
We propose to test the hypothesis that the growth hormone/insulin like
growth factor-I axis through autocrine/paracrine mechanisms may provide
long-term muscle homeostasis under conditions of prolonged weightlessness.
As a key alternative to hormone replacement therapy, ectopic production of
hGH, growth hormone releasing hormone (GHRH), and IGF-I will be studied
for its potential on muscle mass impact in transgenic mice under simulated
microgravity. Expression of either hGH or IGF-I would provide a chronic
source of a growth-promoting protein whose biosynthesis or secretion is
shut down in space. Muscle expression of the IGF-I transgene has
demonstrated about a 20 percent increase in hind limb muscle mass over
control nontransgenic litter mates. These recent experiments, also
establish the utility of hind-limb suspension in mice as a workable model
to study atrophy in weight bearing muscles. Thus, transgenic mice will be
used in hind-limb suspension models to determine the role of GH/IGF-I on
maintenance of muscle mass and whether concentric exercises might act in
synergy with hormone treatment. As a means to engineer and ensure
long-term protein production that would be workable in humans, gene
therapy technology will be used by to monitor muscle mass preservation
during hind-limb suspension, after direct intramuscular injection of a
genetically engineered muscle-specific vector expressing GHRH. Effects of
this gene-based therapy will be assessed in both fast twitch (medial
gastrocnemius) and slow twitch muscle (soleus). End-points include muscle
size, ultrastructure, fiber type, and contractile function, in normal
animals, hind limb suspension, and reambulation.
NASA
Task Book Entry
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