Abstract

Stress decreases milk components such as milk protein and milk yield. The objective of this study was to investigate whether noradrenaline (NA) in milk constituted a factor associated with stress-induced changes in milk proteins such as β-casein. Breast milk obtained from eight healthy, nursing women contained NA at concentrations ranging from 12.7 to 115.5 nM. The expression of tyrosine hydroxylase (TH), a rate-limiting enzyme of NA synthesis, was observed in primary normal human mammary epithelial cells (HMECs), and in MCF-12A and MCF-10A cell lines. The mean NA concentration in culture medium used by MCF-12A transfected with TH small interfering RNA (siRNA) was significantly lower than that of cells transfected with control siRNA. NA concentration in milk in restraint-stressed nursing mice was significantly higher than that in nonstressed nursing mice, owing to elevated TH expression in the mammary epithelium. The mean β-casein concentration in milk in restraint-stressed mice was significantly lower than that in nonstressed mice. NA treatment resulted in a concentration-dependent decrease in β-casein expression in HMECs. β2 adrenergic receptor (ADRB2) expression was observed in HMECs, MCF-12A, and MCF-10A, and immunohistochemical analysis of ADRB2 using mammary epithelium sections obtained from mice at day 10 of lactation showed that ADRB2 was expressed at the apical membrane of mammary epithelium. Treatment with salbutamol, an ADRB2 stimulant, decreased β-casein expression in a concentration-dependent manner in MCF-12A. Our results showed that endogenous NA derived from mammary epithelial cells likely comprises one of the factors involved in stress-induced changes in milk proteins such as β-casein.

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