1. Age- and sex-dependent stimulation of calcium uptake in duodenal cells by prolactin in vitamin D-deficient rats.
- Author
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Balakir RA, Cheng L, Sacktor B, and Liang CT
- Subjects
- Aging metabolism, Animals, Calcium blood, Duodenum metabolism, Female, Male, Rats, Sex Factors, Calcium metabolism, Duodenum drug effects, Prolactin pharmacology, Vitamin D Deficiency metabolism
- Abstract
Administration of ovine-prolactin (O-PRL) stimulated Ca2+ uptake in isolated duodenal cells prepared from vitamin D-deficient rats. The time course of this effect was biphasic: uptake activity reached a peak in 2.5 hrs followed by a decrease at 5 hrs to original levels. This stimulatory effect of O-PRL was observed in vitamin D-deficient male, but not in female rats. This stimulatory effect was observed in 16- and 26-week old, but not 9 week old, animals. Increase in Ca2+ uptake in duodenal cells was not due to a decrease in intracellular Ca2+ efflux. We measured serum Ca concentration in vitamin D-deficient female rats and found that serum Ca increased in D-deficient female rats between 16 and 52 weeks whereas a minimal increase was observed in D-deficient male rats. Although prolactin was shown to stimulate duodenal Ca2+ uptake, it appears that the source of the increase in levels of serum Ca in D-deficient female rats was not derived from an increase in Ca2+ uptake by prolactin in duodenum. The increase in serum calcium with time may explain why female D-deficient rats survive longer then male.
- Published
- 1990
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