| Literature DB >> 2608067 |
Abstract
During lactation, a dramatic rise in serum PRL stimulates milk production, resulting in a substantial rise in calcium mobilization from gut and bone. We found that the production of a newly characterized calcium-mobilizing PTH-like peptide (PTH-LP) by mammary tissue was tightly linked to lactation, suggesting a possible role for PRL in the expression of PTH-LP. Here it is shown that suckling results in both an elevation in serum PRL and the appearance of PTH-LP mRNA in mammary tissue. Bromocriptine, a potent inhibitor of PRL secretion, blocked the suckling-associated rise in serum PRL and the subsequent induction of PTH-LP mRNA in mammary gland. Furthermore, injection of PRL dramatically induced PTH-LP mRNA in unsuckled puerperal glands, but not in glands on day 21 of pregnancy. Thus, the correlation between serum levels of PRL and the expression of PTH-LP mRNA in mammary tissue extends the role of PRL in milk production and suggests a possible mechanism for the PRL effects on calcium metabolism.Entities:
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Year: 1989 PMID: 2608067 DOI: 10.1210/mend-3-9-1443
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mol Endocrinol ISSN: 0888-8809