scholarly journals Modulation of Mammary Gland Development and Milk Production by Growth Hormone Expression in GH Transgenic Goats

2016 ◽  
Vol 7 ◽  
Author(s):  
Zekun Bao ◽  
Jian Lin ◽  
Lulu Ye ◽  
Qiang Zhang ◽  
Jianquan Chen ◽  
...  
2002 ◽  
Vol 197 (1-2) ◽  
pp. 127-131 ◽  
Author(s):  
Paul A Kelly ◽  
Anne Bachelot ◽  
Cécile Kedzia ◽  
Lothar Hennighausen ◽  
Christopher J Ormandy ◽  
...  

2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yao Xiao ◽  
Jason M. Kronenfeld ◽  
Benjamin J. Renquist

ABSTRACTWith a growing population, a reliable food supply is increasingly important. Heat stress reduces livestock meat and milk production. Genetic selection of high producing animals increases endogenous heat production, while climate change increases exogenous heat exposure. Both sources of heat exacerbate the risk of heat-induced depression of production. Rodents are valuable models to understand mechanisms conserved across species. Heat exposure suppresses feed intake across homeothermic species including rodents and production animal species. We assessed the response to early-mid lactation or late gestation heat exposure on milk production and mammary gland development/function, respectively. Using pair-fed controls we experimentally isolated the food intake dependent and independent effects of heat stress on mammary function and mass. Heat exposure (35°C, relative humidity 50%) decreased daily food intake. When heat exposure occurred during lactation, hypophagia accounted for approximately 50% of the heat stress induced hypogalactia. Heat exposure during middle to late gestation suppressed food intake, which was fully responsible for the lowered mammary gland weight of dams at parturition. However, the impaired mammary gland function in heat exposed dams measured by metabolic rate and lactogenesis could not be explained by depressed food consumption. In conclusion, mice recapitulate the depressed milk production and mammary gland development observed in dairy species while providing insight regarding the role of food intake. This opens the potential to apply genetic, experimental and pharmacological models unique to mice to identify the mechanism by which heat is limiting animal production.Summary StatementsThis study demonstrates that heat stress decreases lactation and mammary development through food intake dependent and independent mechanisms.


Endocrinology ◽  
1998 ◽  
Vol 139 (2) ◽  
pp. 659-662 ◽  
Author(s):  
Paul D. Walden ◽  
Weifeng Ruan ◽  
Mark Feldman ◽  
David L. Kleinberg

2018 ◽  
Vol 18 (4) ◽  
pp. 973-990 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hoda Javaheri Barfourooshi ◽  
Armin Towhidi ◽  
Hassan Sadeghipanah ◽  
Mahdi Zhandi ◽  
Saeed Zeinoaldini ◽  
...  

AbstractThe aim of this study was to evaluate the effect of feeding oil supplement on mammary gland development and milk production responses in Holstein cows. Ten multiparous Holstein cows (42.2±9.2 d before calving, 3.25±0.25 body condition score, and 620±35 kg body weight) were randomly assigned to treatments. Treatments were a diet with oil added as palm oil (PO; n=5), or fish oil (FO; n=5) given to cows until 63 d in milk. Milk yield was recorded daily, milk composition (fat, protein, lactose, total solid and somatic cell count) was measured weekly and fatty acid profiles of milk fat were determined at first and last week of the experiment. Samples of mammary tissue were obtained at 7 and 63 d in milk by biopsy gun. Tissue slides were analyzed by Image J software. Results showed that fish oil supplemented diet compared to the palm oil supplemented diet increased milk production after 6 weeks of lactation (P<0.05), content of polyunsaturated fatty acids milk fat (P<0.05) and docosahexaenoic acid (P<0.01). Moreover, n-6:n-3 ratio was decreased by fish oil supplement (P<0.05). Histological studies showed that FO increased the relative percentage of tissue area occupied by epithelial cells as well as a number of total alveoli in each microscopic field (P<0.05). Data suggested that feeding fish oil during the dry period and early lactation could improve development and function of the mammary gland in the dairy cow.


1965 ◽  
Vol 32 (1) ◽  
pp. 99-NP ◽  
Author(s):  
LIDIA RUBINSTEIN ◽  
K. AHRÉN

SUMMARY The secretion of growth hormone from anterior pituitary transplants under the kidney capsule of gonadectomized and hypophysectomized male rats was investigated with special regard to the importance of the mass of functioning pituitary tissue. Body growth and mammary gland development after testosterone stimulation were studied. In rats with the pituitary gland autotransplanted to the kidney capsule body growth was markedly reduced. After administration of testosterone a few groups of alveoli only were seen in the mammary glands. Hypophysectomized rats with four pituitary transplants (an autotransplant and three homotransplants) under the kidney capsule showed slightly better body growth than rats with an autotransplanted hypophysis. When compared with rats with intact pituitary glands body growth was markedly reduced. Mammary gland development after testosterone stimulation was as poor in rats with four pituitary transplants as in rats with an autotransplanted hypophysis. These results suggest strongly that the normal secretion of growth hormone is regulated by the hypothalamus and that the deficiency of growth hormone in rats with the pituitary gland transplanted remote from the brain is due mainly to a loss of 'specific' stimuli from the hypothalamus and not to a 'non-specific' reduction in the amount of functioning pituitary tissue.


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