Abstract

Mammary tissue from midpregnant heifers was cultured with epidermal growth factor (EGF) or transforming growth factor alpha for 1-3 days. After 1 day, 10 nM EGF or transforming growth factor alpha doubled DNA synthesis, whereas lower concentrations (0.1 or 1 nM) increased DNA synthesis 2- to 3-fold after 2-3 days in culture. In other studies, bovine mammary tissue was transplanted to ovariectomized athymic mice and treated for 10 days with saline, estradiol (1 microg/day), progesterone (1 mg/day), or estradiol + progesterone. Subsequent explant culture of the bovine tissue indicated that estradiol + progesterone augmented the ability of EGF to stimulate DNA synthesis. The increased response to EGF was associated with increased EGF binding and with increased EGF-induced tyrosine kinase that paralleled the increased EGF binding. In other studies, athymic mice bearing xenografted bovine mammary tissue were primed for 10 days with estradiol and progesterone, followed by 2-day treatment with saline (control), hydrocortisone (200 microg/day), PRL (1 mg/day), or hydrocortisone + PRL. Hydrocortisone and PRL alone decreased, and PRL + hydrocortisone eliminated, EGF-induced DNA synthesis. EGF receptor content was unaffected by hydrocortisone but was reduced by PRL or hydrocortisone + PRL. Furthermore, the ability of EGF to induce tyrosine kinase activity was decreased by PRL and by hydrocortisone + PRL. The decreased kinase activity was greater than the decrease in receptor binding, suggesting a specific modulation of EGF receptor kinase activity in response to lactogenic hormones.

Full Text
Paper version not known

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call