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Effects of fasting during mid pregnancy or early lactation on mammary development and milk yield in mice

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  01 June 2009

Christopher H. Knight
Affiliation:
Hannah Research Institute, Ayr, Scotland, KA6 5HL
Malcolm Peaker
Affiliation:
Hannah Research Institute, Ayr, Scotland, KA6 5HL

Summary

Mice were fasted during pregnancy or early lactation and the effects on mammary development and milk yield studied on d 13 and d 18 of pregnancy and on d 7 of lactation. Fasting during pregnancy reduced body weight and mammary weight on d 13 of pregnancy but not on d 18. Mammary concentrations and total contents of DNA and RNA ([DNA], [RNA], DNAt, RNAt) were increased or unchanged on d 13 but significantly decreased on d 18. Fasting had no effect on fetal number or weight at either stage of pregnancy. Fasting on d 1 of lactation reduced mammary weight, DNAt and RNAt (but not [DNA] or [RNA]) and the incorporation of tritiated thymidine into DNA on d 2 of lactation. Mammary gland weight and composition on d 7 of lactation were not significantly affected by fasting for 24 h on d 1 of lactation or for 40 h on d 11–13 of pregnancy, except that DNAt was decreased slightly by the latter treatment.

Milk yield (litter weight gain) was depressed markedly during fasting on d 1 of lactation, but thereafter recovered so that it was the same as controls between d 3 and 13 of lactation; after d 13 it fell once more. A 40 h fast on d 11–13 of pregnancy had no effect on milk yield. Thus, although normal mammary development was inhibited by starvation, the gland was subsequently able to compensate so that milk yield was not reduced.

Type
Original Articles
Copyright
Copyright © Proprietors of Journal of Dairy Research 1982

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References

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