Dwarf mice produced by genetic ablation of growth hormone-expressing cells.

Abstract
Fusion of the 310 bp located 5' of the rat growth hormone (GH) gene to the human GH structural gene resulted in somatotrope-specific expression in transgenic mice. Human GH transcripts were detected only in pituitaries of these mice, and immunocytochemical analyses revealed that this expression was limited to GH-expressing cell types. The rat GH 5' sequences were then used to direct the expression of diphtheria toxin to the GH-expressing cells of transgenic mice. A line of mice was established which lacks detectable levels of circulating GH. This deficiency resulted in dwarfism; transgenic animals grew only to half the size of nontransgenic littermates. Nearly all somatotropes were absent, as shown by GH immunostaining in the transgenic pituitaries. Prolactin (PRL)-producing lactotropes, thought to share a common cellular origin with somatotropes, were also reduced in numbers. A model for the lineal relationships between GH- and PRL-synthesizing cells is proposed.