Author:
HENDRY KAY A. K.,MacCALLUM AMANDA J.,KNIGHT CHRISTOPHER H.,WILDE COLIN J.
Abstract
Laminitis is a major cause of lameness in dairy cattle, and is
widely
attributed to a defect in the horny tissue that gives the hoof its mechanical
strength.
Defective horn is associated with, and may be preceded by, impaired keratin
deposition in the hoof epidermis. The cause of abnormal keratin deposition
is not
easily identified but, like epidermal keratinization in other tissues,
is likely to be
controlled by hormones and the paracrine action of locally produced growth
factors.
The hormonal regulation of keratin synthesis and cell proliferation in
the bovine hoof
was studied using tissue explants in organ culture. As the highest incidence
of
laminitis is in early lactation, the study focused on insulin, cortisol
and prolactin,
three hormones implicated in lactogenesis and galactopoiesis. Incubation
of tissue
explants for 24 h in medium containing insulin (10–5000 ng/ml)
stimulated protein
synthesis measured by incorporation of 35 S-labelled amino acids.
Histochemical
examination showed that insulin binding co-localized with the site of protein
synthesis. Insulin also stimulated DNA synthesis, an index of cell proliferation,
which was measured by incorporation of [3H]methyl
thymidine. Cortisol
(10–5000 ng/ml) decreased protein synthesis, whereas prolactin
(10–5000 ng/ml) had
no significant effect on protein or DNA synthesis. Epidermal growth factor
(10–200 ng/ml), a potent inhibitor of keratinization in other
tissues, stimulated
protein synthesis compared with untreated controls. Epidermal growth factor
binding was located microscopically to the germinal and differentiating
epidermal
layers. SDS-PAGE and fluorography showed that the population of proteins
synthesized in the presence of any hormone or growth factor combination
did not
differ from that in untreated controls and included the keratins involved
in horn
deposition. The results show that bovine hoof keratinization is under endocrine
and
growth factor control, and suggest that systemic changes in lactogenic
hormones
may act to inhibit keratin deposition.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Animal Science and Zoology,General Medicine,Food Science
Cited by
20 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献