Stewart K W, Cooper G J S, Davis S R
School of Science and Primary Industries, Waikato Institute of Technology, Hamilton, New Zealand.
J Dairy Sci. 2009 Apr;92(4):1543-53. doi: 10.3168/jds.2008-1617.
The production of milk is closely linked to nutritional state in many mammalian species, but the mechanisms by which changes in nutritional state are signaled to the mammary glands are poorly understood. Simultaneous measurements of mammary blood flow and glucose arterio-venous difference were made across the inguinal mammary glands of anesthetized, lactating rats. Blood flow to the mammary glands of previously fed rats was 0.48 mL/min per gram of mammary tissue. Glucose supply was 1.7 mumol/min per gram and 28% was extracted by the mammary glands. After food deprivation for 18 h, mammary blood flow decreased 48%, glucose arterio-venous difference decreased 72%, and hematocrit increased 7%, resulting in a 60% decrease in glucose supply and an 88% decrease in glucose uptake. After 1 h of refeeding, glucose supply had returned to a similar level to that of normally fed animals, but glucose uptake was 60% higher than in the normally fed state. Mammary glucose uptake was not closely linked to either blood flow or glucose supply, suggesting that substrate supply was not the primary determinant of mammary metabolism. Denervation experiments showed that the mammary metabolic response to altered nutritional state was also unlikely to be closely controlled by neural pathways. Severance of the cutaneous branch of the posterior division of the femoral nerve innervating the inguinal mammary glands did not reduce the high glucose uptake by mammary glands of either fed or refed rats, nor did denervation change the low glucose uptake by mammary glands of food-deprived rats. Denervation reduced blood flow in the associated mammary gland, however, indicating that neural pathways may play a role in supporting mammary blood flow when food is available. In in vitro experiments, the rate of glucose uptake was 35% lower in mammary acini from food-deprived rats than in fed rats 2.5 h after tissue removal, indicating some persistence of the food deprivation-induced suppression of mammary metabolism. Administration of insulin increased glucose uptake in acini from both fed and food-deprived rats, indicating that insulin may be involved in signaling the mammary gland of the restoration of nutrient supply when food-deprived rats are refed. The effects of administration of a gut extract in vivo and in vitro are discussed.
在许多哺乳动物物种中,乳汁分泌与营养状态密切相关,但营养状态变化向乳腺发出信号的机制却鲜为人知。对麻醉的哺乳期大鼠腹股沟乳腺进行了乳腺血流量和葡萄糖动静脉差值的同步测量。先前喂食的大鼠乳腺血流量为每克乳腺组织0.48毫升/分钟。葡萄糖供应为每克1.7微摩尔/分钟,乳腺摄取其中的28%。禁食18小时后,乳腺血流量减少48%,葡萄糖动静脉差值减少72%,血细胞比容增加7%,导致葡萄糖供应减少60%,葡萄糖摄取减少88%。重新喂食1小时后,葡萄糖供应恢复到与正常喂食动物相似的水平,但葡萄糖摄取比正常喂食状态高60%。乳腺葡萄糖摄取与血流量或葡萄糖供应均无密切关联,这表明底物供应并非乳腺代谢的主要决定因素。去神经实验表明,乳腺对营养状态改变的代谢反应也不太可能受神经通路密切控制。切断支配腹股沟乳腺的股神经后支的皮支,并未降低喂食或重新喂食大鼠乳腺的高葡萄糖摄取,去神经也未改变禁食大鼠乳腺的低葡萄糖摄取。然而,去神经减少了相关乳腺的血流量,这表明在有食物时神经通路可能在支持乳腺血流量方面发挥作用。在体外实验中,禁食大鼠的乳腺腺泡在组织切除2.5小时后的葡萄糖摄取率比喂食大鼠低35%,这表明禁食诱导的乳腺代谢抑制存在一定持续性。注射胰岛素可增加喂食和禁食大鼠腺泡的葡萄糖摄取,这表明当禁食大鼠重新喂食时,胰岛素可能参与向乳腺发出营养供应恢复的信号。文中还讨论了体内和体外给予肠道提取物的影响。