Abstract

Effects of insulin and insulin-like growth factor I (IGF-I) on [3H]thymidine incorporation, in vitro, by mammary tissue slices obtained from prepartum and lactating cows were investigated. Both insulin and IGF-I induced up to a 10-fold increase in [3H]thymidine incorporation in the mammary slices cultured in serum-free media. The effect of insulin-stimulated [3H]thymidine incorporation occurred at a threshold of greater than 1.75 pmol/ml and appeared to reach maximum at greater than 8.8 nmol/ml. The response to IGF-I occurred at greater than 6.5 pmol/ml and reached the equivalent of maximal insulin-stimulated incorporation at 39 pmol/ml. No synergistic or additive effects were observed between these two factors. The in vitro response took 3 to 4 d to reach maximum and was inhibited by cytarabine. Mammary tissue obtained from lactating cows incorporated more [3H]thymidine per microgram DNA in response to insulin (175 pmol/ml) than mammary tissue from pregnant cows. Culture of mammary tissue slices with growth hormone, cortisol, prolactin, or triiodothyronine showed no stimulation of [3H]thymidine incorporation over control. Autoradiography of the cultured lactating tissue showed incorporation of [3H]thymidine by 51, 24 and 29% of the ductal epithelial, secretory alveolar epithelial and myoepithelial cells, respectively. All alveolar epithelial cells that incorporated [3H]thymidine contained secretory products. Among nonsecretory cells, 25 and 28% of the fibroblasts and white blood cells, respectively, were labeled. Insulin-like growth factor I, but not bovine somatotropin, stimulated [3H]thymidine uptake into DNA in lactating bovine mammary tissue. Thus, our data support the concept that bovine somatotropin acts through IGF-I to increase DNA synthesis in mammary cells.

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