Brennan A J, Sharp J A, Lefevre C, Topcic D, Auguste A, Digby M, Nicholas K R
Cooperative Research Centre (CRC) for Innovative Dairy Products, Department of Zoology, University of Melbourne, Victoria, 3010, Australia.
J Dairy Sci. 2007 Jun;90 Suppl 1:E66-75. doi: 10.3168/jds.2006-483.
Mammary development and function are regulated by systemic endocrine factors and by autocrine mechanisms intrinsic to the mammary gland, both of which act concurrently. The composition of milk includes nutritional and developmental factors that are crucial to the development of the suckled young, but it is becoming increasingly apparent that milk also has a role in regulating mammary function. This review examines the option of exploiting the comparative biology of species with extreme adaptation to lactation to examine regulatory mechanisms that are present but not readily apparent in other laboratory and livestock species. The tammar wallaby has adopted a reproductive strategy that includes a short gestation (26 d), birth of an immature young, and a relatively long lactation (300 d). The composition of milk changes progressively during the lactation cycle, and this is controlled by the mother and not the sucking pattern of the young. Furthermore, the tammar can practice concurrent asynchronous lactation; the mother provides a concentrated milk high in protein and fat for an older animal that is out of the pouch and a dilute milk low in fat and protein but high in carbohydrates from an adjacent mammary gland for a newborn pouch young. This phenomenon suggests that the mammary gland is controlled locally. The second study species, the Cape fur seal, has a lactation characterized by a repeated cycle of long at-sea foraging trips (up to 28 d) alternating with short suckling periods of 2 to 3 d ashore. Lactation almost ceases while the seal is off shore, but the mammary gland does not progress to apoptosis and involution, most likely because of local control of the mammary gland. Our studies have exploited the comparative biology of these models to investigate how mammary function is regulated by endocrine factors, and particularly by milk. This review reports 3 major findings using these model animals. First, the mammary epithelial cell has an extraordinary intrinsic capacity for survival in our culture model, and the path to either function or death by apoptosis is actively driven. The second outcome is that the route to apoptosis is most likely regulated by specific milk factors. Finally, whey acidic protein, a major milk protein in some species, may play a role in normal mammary development, but that role in vivo may be limited to marsupials. Evolutionary pressure has led to changes in the structure of the protein with an accompanying change in function. Therefore, we propose that a loss of function of this protein in eutherians may relate to a reproductive strategy that is less dependent on lactation.
乳腺的发育和功能受全身内分泌因子以及乳腺固有的自分泌机制调控,二者协同发挥作用。乳汁的成分包括对哺乳幼崽发育至关重要的营养和发育因子,但越来越明显的是,乳汁在调节乳腺功能方面也发挥着作用。本综述探讨了利用对泌乳具有极端适应性的物种的比较生物学来研究在其他实验动物和家畜物种中存在但不明显的调节机制的可能性。袋鼠采用了一种生殖策略,包括短孕期(26天)、早产未成熟幼崽以及相对较长的哺乳期(300天)。乳汁成分在泌乳周期中逐渐变化,这是由母亲控制的,而非幼崽的吸吮模式。此外,袋鼠能够进行同步异步泌乳;母亲为袋外的年长幼崽提供高蛋白和高脂肪的浓缩乳汁,为袋内新生幼崽从相邻乳腺提供低脂肪、低蛋白但高碳水化合物的稀释乳汁。这种现象表明乳腺是受局部控制的。第二个研究物种——南非海狗,其泌乳特点是长时间海上觅食行程(长达28天)与短时间岸上哺乳期(2至3天)交替出现的重复周期。海豹在离岸时泌乳几乎停止,但乳腺不会发展为凋亡和退化,这很可能是由于乳腺的局部控制。我们的研究利用了这些模型的比较生物学来研究内分泌因子,特别是乳汁如何调节乳腺功能。本综述报告了使用这些模型动物的3个主要发现。第一,在我们的培养模型中,乳腺上皮细胞具有非凡的内在存活能力,并且通过凋亡走向功能或死亡的途径是由其主动驱动的。第二个结果是,凋亡途径很可能受特定乳汁因子的调节。最后,乳清酸性蛋白是某些物种中的主要乳蛋白,可能在正常乳腺发育中发挥作用,但该作用在体内可能仅限于有袋类动物。进化压力导致了该蛋白结构的变化以及随之而来的功能变化。因此,我们认为该蛋白在真兽类动物中的功能丧失可能与较少依赖泌乳的生殖策略有关。