Hostname: page-component-77c89778f8-sh8wx Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-07-19T16:18:01.892Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Maternal: infant interactions and growth in lambs

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  24 November 2017

J.M Bassett*
Affiliation:
The Growth and Development Unit, University Field Laboratory, Wytham, Oxford OX2 8QJ
Get access

Extract

Hormones play a vital role in promoting growth and in re-ordering metabolic priorities among tissues in a wide variety of physiological situations important to animal production. During pregnancy and lactation, however, the hormonal requirements for growth promotion in the developing infant seem diametrically opposed to those necessary within the mother for support of pregnancy and later for the provision of milk to the suckling young. Fetal endocrine autonomy clearly plays an essential role in protecting prenatal development. Despite this, fetal metabolism cannot be isolated altogether from that of the mother because of the need for maintained nutrient transfer to the conceptus. Indeed, hormones secreted by the fetal placenta into the maternal circulation appear to play important roles in manipulating maternal metabolism to favour transfer of metabolic substrates such as glucose to the conceptus. Similarly, alterations in the secretion of growth hormone during lactation have been considered to play an important homeorhetic role favouring transfer of substrate to the mammary gland for milk synthesis. However, many aspects of these adaptive changes remain uncertain.

Type
Nutrient: Endocrine Interactions in Farm Animals
Copyright
Copyright © The British Society of Animal Production 1991

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Bassett, JM, Madill, D, Nicol, DH & Thorburn, GD (1973) In Foetal and Neonatal Physiology Comline, RS, Cross, KW, Dawes, GS & Nathanilsz, PW Eds. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, pp 351359 Google Scholar
Bassett, JM & Madill, D (1974) Journal of Endocrinology 61: 465477 CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Fowden, AL, Hughes, P & Comline, RS (1989) Quarterly Journal of Experimental Physiology 74: 703714 Google Scholar
Mellor, DJ, Flint, DJ, Vernon, RG & Forsyth, IA (1987) Quarterly Journal of Experimental Physiology 72: 345356 Google Scholar
Ronge, H, Blum, J, Clement, C, Jans, F, Leuenberger, H & Binder, H (1988) Animal Production 47: 165183 Google Scholar