Abstract
Abstract
The hormonal regulation of protein kinase C (PKC) induction over 3 to 14 days was investigated in the mouse mammary gland in vitro and in vivo. In intact mice, estradiol (1 μg/ mouse injected daily for 2 weeks) stimulated PKC activity 70%, while progesterone (1 mg/mouse injected daily) inhibited it by 30%. Prolactin, whose levels were elevated for 2 weeks by two pituitary isografts, had no effect. When mammary gland explants were cultured in insulin and Cortisol, the further addition of estradiol (1 ng/ml), progesterone (1 μg/ml), or prolactin (1 μg/ml) did not alter PKC activity after 3 days. These data suggest the following conclusions: although previous studies have implicated prolactin in the transient, calcium-phospholipid activation of PKC, it does not appear to elevate total levels of this kinase over prolonged periods. In contrast, the sex steroids do appear to affect long-term levels of this kinase; furthermo, this latter effect may be indirect.
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