Osteoporosis induced in mice by overproduction of interleukin 4

  1. D B Lewis,
  2. H D Liggitt,
  3. E L Effmann,
  4. S T Motley,
  5. S L Teitelbaum,
  6. K J Jepsen,
  7. S A Goldstein,
  8. J Bonadio,
  9. J Carpenter, and
  10. R M Perlmutter
  1. Department of Pediatrics, University of Washington, Seattle 98195.

Abstract

Osteoporosis is a common disease in which loss of bone mass results in skeletal fragility. The development of therapies for this disorder has been hampered by the lack of a convenient animal model. Here we describe a disorder in bone homeostasis in transgenic mice that inappropriately express the cytokine interleukin 4 (IL-4) under the direction of the lymphocyte-specific proximal promoter for the lck gene. Bone disease in lck-IL-4 mice appeared to result from markedly decreased bone formation by osteoblasts, features strikingly similar to those observed in cases of severe low-turnover human involutional osteoporosis. By 2 months of age, female and male lck-IL-4 mice invariably developed severe osteoporosis of both cortical and trabecular bone. Osteoporosis was observed in two independently derived founder animals, indicating that this phenotype was directly mediated by the IL-4 transgene.

« Previous | Next Article »Table of Contents