Abstract

This research was carried out on seven Damascus goats, to study the relationship between milk production, during advancing lactation, and the changes in secretory mammary cells frequency and cellular activity. Biopsies were obtained from the mammary gland at the three stages of lactation, early, mid and late, for histological and histochemical studies. The histological structures of the mammary gland showed clear differences between lactation stages—being more developed in the early and the mid stages, compared to the late stage of lactation. The number of the alveolar secretory cells increased from the early to the mid stage of lactation by 12.9% and then was reduced at the late stage by 35.9% from that at the mid stage. The milk yield increased by 51.3% from the early to the mid stage, and then was reduced at the late stage by 71.4% from that of the mid stage. The total sectional areas of plate equal to 1.22 mm 2/plate of the alveoli were the smallest during late lactation (0.36 mm 2/plate) compared to that during the early and the mid stage of lactation (0.50 and 1.17 mm 2/plate, respectively). Numerous loci of alkaline phosphatase enzyme (AP) were apparent on the outer surface of the alveolar secretory cells at the early and the mid stages of lactation—suggesting that this enzyme plays an important physiological role in the apical membrane of the alveolar epithelial cells during lactation. Dense protein staining of these cells as well as increased frequency of DNA expression denote great development and increased numbers of these cells at early and mid stages of lactation. This was accompanied by a high level of milk secretion reaching 939.3 ± 130 and 1421.4 ± 123.4 ml/head/day, respectively. In contrast, at the late stage of lactation, the size of alveoli was reduced and few alveoli showed weak AP activity, weak protein manifestation and the lowest frequency of DNA loci. This coincided with the reduction in milk yield (407 ml/head/day). It could be concluded that the stages of the lactation influence the cell number and activity of the mammary parenchyma.

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