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Division of Genetics (C.T.A., W.W.C.), Departments of Medicine and Pathology (M.P.F.), Brigham and Womens Hospital and Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts 02115
Address all correspondence and requests for reprints to: Dr. William W. Chin, G. W. Thorn Research Building, Room 1019, Brigham and Womens Hospital, 20 Shattuck Street, Boston, Massachusetts 02115.
Our previous work has shown that 1.2 kb of the 5' flanking region of
the mouse GnRH receptor (mGnRH-R) gene is sufficient to direct
tissue-specific expression in vitro. In this study, we
have used the cell-specific regulatory sequences of the mGnRH-R gene
promoter to target the expression of the simian virus 40 virus T
antigen (TAg) to the pituitary gland of transgenic mice. A hybrid
transgene, GnRH-R/TAg, was prepared using the -1164/+52 region of the
mGnRH-R gene and +2533/+5234 sequences encoding the large T antigen of
the simian virus 40. Two founders developed tumors of apparent
pituitary origin at 44 (M28, female) and 50 (M25, male) days of age.
M28 and M25 mice were about 50% underweight, and their gonads were
grossly underdeveloped compared with wild-type litter mates. A third
male founder, M29, developed a tumor at a later time (109 days). M29
was able to breed successfully and stably transmit the GnRH-R/TAg
transgene. Mice of the M29 transgene line developed tumors at 45
months of age. Gross examination showed that the tumors extend from the
sella and infiltrate into the inferior surface of the brain. In small
tumors collected from young transgenic animals, normal pituitary cells
as well as transition areas of increasing cellular atypia are evident.
Frankly malignant cells are seen in all tumors. The pituitary tumors
express the
-, FSHß-, and LHß-subunits and the GnRH-R messenger
RNA, all markers of a gonadotrope but not of other anterior pituitary
cell lineages. In summary, our studies indicate that 1.2 kb of the
5'-flanking region of the mGnRH-R gene can be used to target expression
specifically to the gonadotropes of the pituitary gland in transgenic
mice. The GnRH-R gene promoter-directed expression appears to be
cell-specific and results in the formation of tumors that are primarily
of gonadotropic origin.
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