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The role of the young in the control of the hormonal events during lactation and behavioral weaning in the golden hamster
Authors:Linda J Swanson  Constance S Campbell
Institution:Department of Biological Sciences, Northwestern University, Evanston, Illinois 60201 U.S.A.
Abstract:This study was designed to determine the relationship between the behavioral and physiological changes occurring in the hamster over the course of lactation. Experimental (E) females were given litters of six 3-day-old pups on Day 13 of lactation and allowed to raise them. Control (C) females raised their own litters of six pups. Groups of E and C females were decapitated at 1000 and 1700 hr when their pups were either 8, 18, or 28 days old. Nursing was observed for 1 hr on the 3 days prior to autopsy. Nursing behavior disappeared by Day 28 in C females. E females exhibited nursing behavior at levels equal to those observed in C females until E pups were 28 days old and 38 days had elapsed since parturition. Despite the fact that E mothers continued to nurse pups on day 18 postpartum when pups were 8 days old, E pups showed lower growth rates than did C pups. Prolactin (PRL) levels remained elevated when E pups were 8 days old even though E pups did not grow normally. PRL levels decreased over time in both C and E females and reached baseline by Day 28 although nursing behavior was still elevated in E females. Thus, nursing behavior did not stimulate PRL release during late lactation. Estradiol (E2) levels in C females remained at baseline until Day 28 when levels increased. LH, FSH, and Progesterone (P) levels in C females showed a dramatic diurnal pattern which disappeared by Day 28, when levels dropped. Levels of E2, P, LH, and FSH in E females closely paralleled those of C females only when groups were compared with respect to pup age. Thus, behavioral weaning and the return to estrous cyclicity appear to be dependent upon the age of the pups rather than the time elapsed since parturition. However, milk production and PRL release appear to be more closely tied to the number of days postpartum and can be dissociated from the amount of nursing behavior observed.
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