J. Anim Sci.
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J. Anim Sci. 1977. 45:627-634.
© 1977 American Society of Animal Science

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Glucocorticoids in Mammary Tissue and Milk1 ,2,

H. Allen Tucker and J. W. Schwalm

Michigan State University3, East Lansing 48824

Abstract

Mammary glands are target organs for glucocorticoids which are bound with high affinity (Kdbcong10–8 to 10–10M) to specific sites in the cytoplasm and nucleus of the cell. The mammary glucocorticoid binding site is unique from the corticoid binding globulin (transcortin) of blood. In one study each mammary cell of lactating cows bound approximately 1 ,300 glucocorticoid molecules, whereas mammary tissue of heifers and dry cows bound approximately 300 to 400 molecules per cell. The mammary tissues binding sites are probably essential for glucocorticoids to exert their biological function within the mammary cell because binding activity is correlated with inhibition of glucose incorporation into mammary tissue slices in lactating cows. A small portion of the glucocorticoids are excreted into the milk, although their concentrations in milk (x range from .19 to .62 ng/ml) averaged only 3.8% of those in serum (x range from 6.8 to 13.4 ng/ml). The milk glucocorticoids decrease with advancing lactation but are unaffected by stage of estrous cycle. The glucocorticoids are associated primarily with the protein fractions of milk, whereas the ovarian steroids are associated principally with the lipid fractions of milk.


Footnotes

1 Published with the approval of the Director of the Agricultural Experiment Station as Journal Article No. 7797. This research was supported in part by U.S. Public Health Service Grants FD 00706 and HD 05750.

2 Presented as part of the Symposium on Natural Hormones in Edible Animal Products, held during the A.S.A.S. Annual Meeting at Texas A&M University, August 16, 1976. Publication was supported in part by DHEW/PHS/FDA/BVM contract No. 221-76-0129.

3 Animal Reproduction Laboratory, Department of Dairy Science.







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Copyright © 1977 by the American Society of Animal Science.