Naomi A Bigler, Josef J Gross, Craig R Baumrucker, Rupert M Bruckmaier
This review
discusses endocrine and functional changes during the transition from late
gestation to lactation that are related to the production of colostrum in
different mammalian species. Species covered in this
article include ungulate species (cattle, sheep, goats, pigs, horses), rodents
(rat, mouse), rabbits, and carnivores (cats, dogs), as well as humans. An immediate availability of high quality colostrum for
the newborn after birth is crucial in species where a transfer of
immunoglobulins (Ig) does not or only partially occur via the placenta during
pregnancy. Declining activity of gestagens, in most species progesterone
(P4), is crucial at the end of pregnancy to allow for the characteristic
endocrine changes to initiate parturition and lactation, but the endocrine
regulation of colostrogenesis is negligible. Both, the functional pathways and
the timing of gestagen withdrawal differ considerably among mammalian species. In species with a sustaining corpus luteum
throughout the entire pregnancy (cattle, goat, pig, cat, dog, rabbit, mouse,
and rat), a prostaglandin F2α (PGF2α)-induced luteolysis shortly before
parturition is assumed to be the key event to initiate parturition as well as
lactogenesis. In species where the gestagen production
is taken over by the placenta during the course of gestation (e.g., sheep,
horse, and human), the reduction of gestagen activity is more complex, as PGF2α
does not affect placental gestagen production. In sheep the steroid hormone
synthesis is directed away from P4 towards estradiol-17β (E2) to achieve a low
gestagen activity at high E2 concentrations. In humans the uterus becomes
insensitive to P4, as parturition occurs despite still high P4 concentrations. However,
lactogenesis is not completed as long as P4 concentration is high. Early
colostrum and thus Ig intake for immune protection is not needed for the human
newborn which allows a delayed onset of copious milk secretion for days until
the placenta expulsion causes the P4 drop. Like humans, horses do not need low
gestagen concentrations for successful parturition. However, newborn foals need
immediate immune protection through Ig intake with colostrum. This requires the
start of lactogenesis before parturition which is not fully clarified. The knowledge of the endocrine changes and
related pathways to control the key events integrating the processes of
colostrogenesis, parturition, and start of lactation are incomplete in many
species.
2023, JAS, 101: skad146
https://doi.org/10.1093/jas/skad146
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