CAPRINE PLACENTAL LACTOGEN: LEVELS OF PROLACTIN-LIKE AND GROWTH HORMONE-LIKE ACTIVITIES IN THE CIRCULATION OF PREGNANT GOATS DETERMINED BY RADIORECEPTOR ASSAYS

Abstract
SUMMARY: Radioreceptor assays for prolactin-like (lactogenic) activity and growth hormone (GH)-like activity have been used to study concentrations of caprine placental lactogen (PL) in the circulation during pregnancy. Both lactogenic and GH-like activities increased from less than 100 ng/ml (ovine prolactin- and human GH-equivalents) about 60 days after mating to reach peak levels (400–1600 ng/ml) between days 110 and 130 of pregnancy. The levels of both activities increased in essentially the same fashion but during the last 15 days of pregnancy, lactogenic activity declined less than GH-like activity. This divergence was most pronounced at parturition when levels of lactogenic activity increased (∼ 700 ng/ml) despite very low (< 200 ng/ml) levels of GH-like activity being measured and this probably reflected increased secretion of pituitary prolactin near parturition. When serum from a pregnant goat or a simple alkaline extract of placental cotyledons was fractionated on a column packed with Sephadex G-100, lactogenic and GH-like activities eluted together with distribution coefficients of approximately 0·5–0·6. The possibility that caprine PL serves physiologically as a luteotrophin and/or mammotrophin during pregnancy in goats is discussed.