Exploring the contribution of mammary-derived serotonin on liver and pancreas metabolism during lactation.
Sena L FieldEverardo Anta GalvanLaura L HernandezJimena LaportaPublished in: PloS one (2024)
During lactation, the murine mammary gland is responsible for a significant increase in circulating serotonin. However, the role of mammary-derived serotonin in energy homeostasis during lactation is unclear. To investigate this, we utilized C57/BL6J mice with a lactation and mammary-specific deletion of the gene coding for the rate-limiting enzyme in serotonin synthesis (TPH1, Wap-Cre x TPH1FL/FL) to understand the metabolic contributions of mammary-derived serotonin during lactation. Circulating serotonin was reduced by approximately 50% throughout lactation in Wap-Cre x TPH1FL/FL mice compared to wild-type mice (TPH1FL/FL), with mammary gland and liver serotonin content reduced on L21. The Wap-Cre x TPH1FL/FL mice had less serotonin and insulin immunostaining in the pancreatic islets on L21, resulting in reduced circulating insulin but no changes in glucose. The mammary glands of Wap-Cre x TPH1FL/FL mice had larger mammary alveolar areas, with fewer and smaller intra-lobular adipocytes, and increased expression of milk protein genes (e.g., WAP, CSN2, LALBA) compared to TPH1FL/FL mice. No changes in feed intake, body composition, or estimated milk yield were observed between groups. Taken together, mammary-derived serotonin appears to contribute to the pancreas-mammary cross-talk during lactation with potential implications in the regulation of insulin homeostasis.
Keyphrases
- wild type
- human milk
- high fat diet induced
- dairy cows
- body composition
- type diabetes
- adipose tissue
- blood pressure
- genome wide
- metabolic syndrome
- low birth weight
- gene expression
- skeletal muscle
- blood glucose
- small molecule
- resistance training
- copy number
- weight gain
- genome wide identification
- bone mineral density
- protein protein
- bioinformatics analysis