Hormonal induction of alpha-lactalbumin and beta-lactoglobulin in cultured mammary explants from pregnant pigs.
Mammary tissue from pigs on days 60, 80, 90, 100 and 100+ (days 106-111) of pregnancy has been cultured in vitro as explants. The total accumulation in tissue and culture medium of the whey proteins alpha-lactalbumin and beta-lactoglobulin has been measured using specific radioimmunoassays. The control, uncultured tissue showed progressive morphological development from sparse, non-secretory epithelial tissue on day 60 to full lobulo-alveolar development with some accumulated secretion from day 100. In uncultured explants beta-lactoglobulin could be detected consistently from day 90 (13 +/- 12 ng/micrograms DNA, n = 4) and alpha-lactalbumin from day 100 (1.3 +/- 0.5 ng/micrograms DNA, n = 11). At all stages of pregnancy, both whey proteins increased markedly during the period of culture (up to 7 d). Stimulation of alpha-lactalbumin appeared to be primarily under prolactin control. Prolactin increased alpha-lactalbumin accumulation to a similar extent alone, or in the presence of insulin and/or corticosterone. The response to prolactin was dose-dependent over the range 0.4-20 nM (10-500 ng/ml). Porcine prolactin was more potent than ovine prolactin. There was no effect of porcine growth hormone and no synergism detected between prolactin and tri-iodothyronine. By contrast, no specific hormonal requirements were established for accumulation of beta-lactoglobulin, which appeared to increase in vitro if tissue remained viable in various combinations of insulin, corticosterone and prolactin. It was not stimulated by growth hormone. There was some indication of a prolactin-sensitive component in longer term cultures after day 4.[1]References
- Hormonal induction of alpha-lactalbumin and beta-lactoglobulin in cultured mammary explants from pregnant pigs. Dodd, S.C., Forsyth, I.A., Buttle, H.L., Gurr, M.I., Dils, R.R. J. Dairy Res. (1994) [Pubmed]
Annotations and hyperlinks in this abstract are from individual authors of WikiGenes or automatically generated by the WikiGenes Data Mining Engine. The abstract is from MEDLINE®/PubMed®, a database of the U.S. National Library of Medicine.About WikiGenesOpen Access LicencePrivacy PolicyTerms of Useapsburg