Abstract

Pancreatic somatostatin-like immunoreactivity (SLI), immunoreactive insulin (IRI) and glucagon-like immunoreactivity (GLI) were measured during growth in ducks. The content of each hormone increased progressively but at different rates in the dorsal, ventral and splenic lobes of the pancreas. In the almost fully grown duck, the splenic lobe contained 80 and 63% of the total content of GLI and SLI respectively but low levels of IRI (23%), which were highest in the dorsal lobe (53%). In contrast to the hormonal content, only total GLI concentrations increased during development, the SLI concentrations remaining stable and IRI concentrations declining during growth. Gel filtration of pancreatic extracts indicated that most of the SLI in the pancreas of young and adult birds was somatostatin-14, although somatostatin-28 was present in the ventral lobe of young birds and larger molecular forms were present in the ventral and dorsal lobes. These changes in pancreatic hormonal content and concentration are dissimilar to age-related changes in SLI, GLI and IRI previously observed in the plasma of ducks. Plasma levels of pancreatic hormones may thus be controlled by hormonal and/or neutral factors during post-hatch growth.

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