The question of whether endogenous prolactin might be detectable in normally lactating rat mammary glands (LMG) was examined by light microscopic immunohistochemistry. In an initial study, sections of LMG were incubated sequentially with I) rabbit anti-rat prolactin (APRL); II) anti-rabbit gamma globulin: peroxidase conjugate (ARgammaG-per), prepared from goat anti-rabbit gamma globulin and horseradish peroxidase, and III) 3,3'-diaminobenzidine mixed with H2O2(DAB). Use of this three-step procedure led to staining of stromal, parenchymal and intraluminal elements. However, control procedures which ommitted step I produced similar staining, caused by direct binding of the ARgammaG-per to endogenous tissue components (possibly rat immunoglobulins). This precluded detection of indirect, APRL-linked, binding of ARgammaG-per. In subsequent experiments, direct binding of ARgammaG-per was prevented by preincubating LMG sections with goat anti-monkey gamma globulin (AMgammaG), following which, the three-step reaction sequence (APRL, ARgammaG-per and DAB) led to APRL-dependent staining, both within the alveolar lumina and in the apices of epithelial cells. This staining, presumably of endogenous prolactin, appeared to be specific, since it did not occur when absorbed APRL (APRL admixed with highly purified rat prolactin) was substituted for APRL in step I of the reaction sequence. In contrast, when an incubation with purified rat prolactin was interposed between the AMgammaG pretreatment and the three-step reaction sequence, staining of epithelial elements was intensified, indicating that these cells had contained unoccupied prolactin-binding sites. The apparent presence of both prolactin-binding sites and endogenous immunoreactive prolactin in LMG alveolar cells strongly suggests that this protein hormone can enter these target cells under physiological conditions.
In both intact and castrated male and female rats, administration of the A-ring reduced androgen, dihydrotestosterone (DHT), consistently failed to stimulate prolactin (PRL) secretion although it inhibited LH release and, in males, stimulated ventral prostate growth. In intact females, but not in the other types of rat, DHT actually suppressed PRL release. These findings do not support generalizations, based entirely on findings with testosterone, that both "androgens" and estrogens exert stimulatory actions on PRL secretion. The distinct stimulatory effects of testosterone and its esters on PRL secretion seem attributable, not to their androgenic actions per se, but to the ability of testosterone to form estrogenic metabolites. This ability does not appear to be shared by the "pure" androgen, DHT.
Two approaches were used to establish the intercellular distribution of fatty acid synthetase and thioesterase II in the lactating rat mammary gland. Thioesterase II is the chain-length regulatory enzyme in the biosynthesis of the medium-chain fatty acids characteristic of milk fat. Using immunohistochemical techniques, immunoreactive fatty acid synthetase was found in both mammary adipocytes and epithelial cells; in contrast, immunoreactive epithelial cells were isolated from lactating rat mammary glands after digestion with collagenase and thermolysin, and their lipogenic activity was studied using isotopically labelled acetate. Consistent with the immunohistochemical data, adipocytes synthesized exclusively long-chain fatty acids whereas epithelial cells synthesized predominantly chain fatty acids. The results indicate that the capacity for synthesis of medium-chain fatty acids is a unique property of the epithelial cell component of the mammary gland.
Rabbit antisera to rat pituitary follicle-stimulating hormone (FSH) and to rat luteinizing hormone (LH) were used, in an immunocytochemical probe, to determine the ontogeny and distribution of immunoreactive, endogenous, intraovarian FSH and LH in immature rats. Ovaries from rats 4, 8, 12, and 21 days of age were studied. Both gonadotrophins were first immunodetectable on Day 8. In reactive primordial follicles, LH was restricted to the cytoplasm and nuclei of the surrounding follicle cells. In those follicles possessing both squamous and cuboidal follicle cells, i.e., transitional between primordial and primary, LH was found in both the cytoplasm and nuclei of both follicle cell types. In primary follicles, LH was no longer present in granulosa cells but was concentrated in germ cell cytoplasm. In contrast, in primordial follicles, FSH was restricted to the germ cell but was present in both the oocyte cytoplasm and germinal vesicle. In transitional and primary follicles, FSH remained within the oocyte cytoplasm and germinal vesicle but also became detectable within the cytoplasm and nuclei of granulosa cells. These findings raise some important new questions regarding the role@) of the gonadotrophins in early follicular development. [P.S.E.B.M. 1989[P.S.E.B.M. , Vol 1901 n the rat, folliculogenesis begins during fetal life and results, at birth, in the presence of primordial folli-
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