Abstract

Taurine levels in various tissues and fluids of female rats were measured throughout pregnancy and lactation. The taurine concentration of liver markedly increased at days 19 and 21 of pregnancy to 188% of levels for nonpregnant, nonlactating control rats and then fell rapidly after delivery to reach only 30% of the control level by 3 days post-partum. Muscle and heart taurine concentrations were significantly negatively correlated with liver taurine levels. Brain taurine levels were low at days 14, 19 and 21 of pregnancy and day 14 of lactation. Urinary excretion of taurine decreased to 32% of control levels at day 21 of pregnancy and was negatively correlated with the hepatic taurine concentration over the course of pregnancy and lactation. The ratio of glycine- to taurine-conjugated bile acids was strongly negatively correlated with the hepatic taurine concentration. The milk taurine level was positively correlated with hepatic taurine concentration during lactation. The hepatic taurine pool appears to increase just before parturition and to rapidly decrease during the first few days of lactation when high levels of taurine are secreted in the milk. Our data suggests that the accumulation of taurine in the liver may be related to both a decreased renal clearance of taurine and a shifting of tauring from other tissues to the liver and that this enlarged pool of hepatic taurine may serve as a source of taurine for secretion in the early milk.

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