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Hormones, Mammary Growth, and Lactation: a 41-Year Perspective
- Source :
- Journal of Dairy Science. 83:874-884
- Publication Year :
- 2000
- Publisher :
- American Dairy Science Association, 2000.
-
Abstract
- When I was a beginning graduate student 41 yr ago it had been established that estrogen caused mammary duct growth; a combination of estrogen and progesterone was required for lobule-alveolar development of the mammary glands; and prolactin and growth hormone were essential for mammary growth. In laboratory species exogenous prolactin, glucocorticoids, and estrogen would initiate secretion of milk provided the mammary glands had a well-developed lobule-alveolar system. It was not known with certainty that progesterone inhibited the process. For some species, prolactin and thyroxine had been shown to stimulate lactation, while glucocorticoids suppressed lactation. Definitive roles for growth hormone and insulin during lactation had not been established. Studies of hormonal control of mammary growth and function in cattle were few. In vitro methods to study hormonal regulation of the mammary glands were in their infancy. Quantitative measures of changes in mammary cell numbers and specific components of milk in response to hormones were rare. The concepts for quantification of hormone concentrations, hormone receptors, growth factors, and binding proteins in blood; hormonal regulation of nutrient partitioning; and hormonally induced mechanisms of action within mammary cells were waiting to be discovered. And eventually they were. However, lest we become too enamored with our current understanding of the hormones that control mammary growth and lactation, it remains a fact that the greatest physiological stimulus for milk yield is pregnancy, not some cocktail of exogenous hormones, growth factors, receptor agonists/ antagonists, or gene therapies. Viva la mom!
- Subjects :
- medicine.medical_specialty
medicine.drug_class
medicine.medical_treatment
Mammary gland
Biology
Prolactin cell
Insulin-like growth factor
Mammary Glands, Animal
Pregnancy
Lactation
Internal medicine
Genetics
medicine
Animals
Glucocorticoids
Progesterone
History, 20th Century
Hormones
Prolactin
Endocrinology
medicine.anatomical_structure
Estrogen
Hormone receptor
Growth Hormone
Cattle
Female
Animal Science and Zoology
Food Science
Hormone
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 00220302
- Volume :
- 83
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Journal of Dairy Science
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....9366efbfbbc8d334ab9908c647dbc23a
- Full Text :
- https://doi.org/10.3168/jds.s0022-0302(00)74951-4