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The differential actions of cortisol on the synthesis and turnover of alpha-lactalbumin and casein and on accumulation of their mRNA in mouse mammary gland in organ culture.

Authors :
Nagamatsu Y
Oka T
Source :
The Biochemical journal [Biochem J] 1983 May 15; Vol. 212 (2), pp. 507-15.
Publication Year :
1983

Abstract

Cortisol was previously shown to exert different, concentration-dependent, effects on the accumulation of casein and alpha-lactalbumin in mammary glands from mid-pregnant mice cultured in the presence of insulin and prolactin [Ono & Oka (1980) Cell 19, 473-480]. The present study demonstrated that the addition of 30nM-cortisol to the medium containing insulin and prolactin resulted in a marked enhancement of the rate of synthesis of both alpha-lactalbumin and casein in cultured tissue. The addition of 3 microM-cortisol in combination with insulin and prolactin caused a marked decrease in the rate of alpha-lactalbumin synthesis, but increased casein synthesis substantially. Similar changes were also observed in the amount of translatable mRNA for alpha-lactalbumin and casein in mammary explants cultured with insulin, prolactin and the two concentrations of cortisol. The study of the turnover of the milk proteins in cultured explants showed that virtually all of the casein synthesized remained intact in tissue explants cultured with 3 microM cortisol, whereas about 45% of casein disappeared in 40h from explants cultured with 30nM-cortisol. In contrast, the two concentrations of cortisol did not differentially affect the disappearance of alpha-lactalbumin, which was about 55% in 40h. These results indicate that the concentration-dependent differential actions of cortisol on the accumulation of alpha-lactalbumin and casein are exerted through its effects on the rate of synthesis and turnover of the two proteins as well as on the accumulation of their mRNA species.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
0264-6021
Volume :
212
Issue :
2
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
The Biochemical journal
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
6349620
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1042/bj2120507