Compensatory increases in milk secretion in response to unilateral inhibition by colchicine during lactation in the goat.

1. Milk secretion in one mammary gland of goats was temporarily inhibited by intramammary treatment with colchicine at weeks 6, 12, 18, 24 and 30 of lactation. The magnitude of the inhibition was similar at all stages when compared with milk yield before the experiment. 2. The untreated gland partially compensated for the decreased rate of milk secretion by significantly increasing its own rate of secretion. There was no significant effect of stage of lactation on this response. 3. The rapidity of the compensatory response suggests that existing secretory cells increased their rate of secretion, and therefore that the mammary secretory cells are not secreting at their intrinsic maximum at any stage of lactation. 4. In later stages of lactation (weeks 18, 24 and 30) the increases in the untreated gland were more pronounced in afternoon milkings (8 h milking interval) than in morning milkings (16 h interval. At week 30 only, the rate of secretion before treatment was similarly lower in the 16 h period. It is proposed that an additional limitation is imposed on secretion during the relatively long period of milk accumulation as lactation advances and declines. 5. The results are discussed in relation to rate‐limitations on milk secretion with respect to substrate supply and possible systemically active mammary factors.

[1]  E. Maltz,et al.  Effects of frequent milking on milk secretion and mammary blood flow in the goat. , 1984, Quarterly journal of experimental physiology.

[2]  M. Peaker,et al.  Arterial plasma composition during compensatory increase in milk secretion in the goat: relation to rate limitation. , 1983, Quarterly journal of experimental physiology.

[3]  M. Peaker,et al.  Effects of frequent milking on milk secretion during lactation in the goat: relation to factors which limit the rate of secretion. , 1982, Quarterly journal of experimental physiology.

[4]  M. Neville,et al.  Ionized calcium in milk and the integrity of the mammary epithelium in the goat. , 1981, The Journal of physiology.

[5]  M. Peaker,et al.  The effects of colchicine on milk secretion, mammary metabolism and blood flow in the goat. , 1980, Quarterly journal of experimental physiology and cognate medical sciences.

[6]  M. Peaker The effect of raised intramammary pressure on mammary function in the goat in relation to the cessation of lactation. , 1980, The Journal of physiology.

[7]  S. Patton Reversible suppression of lactation by colchicine , 1974, FEBS letters.

[8]  M. Peaker,et al.  The effects of oxytocin and milk removal on milk secretion in the goat , 1971, The Journal of physiology.

[9]  F. Bresciani Ovarian Steroid Control of Cell Proliferation in the Mammary Gland and Cancer1 , 1971 .

[10]  J. Linzell Mammary‐gland blood flow and oxygen, glucose and volatile fatty acid uptake in the conscious goat , 1960, The Journal of physiology.

[11]  B. Heinemann The Determination of Citric Acid in Milk Products by Cerate Oxidimetry , 1944 .