Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
10956190 | Molecular and Cellular Endocrinology | 2014 | 10 Pages |
Abstract
Marsupial ELP (early lactation protein) and its eutherian orthologue, CTI (colostrum trypsin inhibitor) are expressed in the mammary gland only for the first 100 days postpartum (Phase 2A) in the tammar wallaby and during the bovine and canine colostrogenesis period 24-36 h postpartum respectively. The factors which regulate temporal ELP and CTI expression are unknown. A tammar mammary gland explant culture model was used to investigate ELP gene regulation during pregnancy and early- and mid-lactation (Phase 1, 2A and 2B respectively). Tammar ELP expression could only be manipulated in explants in vitro if the gene was already expressed in vivo. ELP expression was maximal in Phase 1 explants treated with lactogenic hormones (insulin, hydrocortisone and prolactin), but unlike LGB (β-lactoglobulin), ELP expression was maintained in insulin or insulin and hydrocortisone over a 12-day culture period. In contrast, ELP was down-regulated when cultured without hormones. ELP could not be induced in explants cultured from mid-lactation which suggested that transcriptional repressors may prevent ELP expression during this period.
Keywords
PI3KpH.M199CSN2LGBPRLRCTILLPPRLELPINSMECIGFEGF17β-OestradiolMAPKα-caseinβ-Lactoglobulinβ-CaseinSTATinsulinexplantPregnancyPostpartumTriiodothyronineMammary epithelial cellepidermal growth factorPhaseInsulin-like growth factorCultureSignal transducer and activator of transcriptionmedium 199not significantHormoneHydrocortisonemitogen-activated protein kinaseProlactinPREGInsulin genecalMarsupialinsulin receptorprolactin receptorglucocorticoid receptor
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Authors
Elizabeth A. Pharo,