Abstract
High doses of 17.beta.-estradiol given newborn mice the first 5 days of life had no effect on mammary growth at 3 wk of age whereas glands measured at 5 wk of age displaced marked dose-dependent differences in area and branching. The number of duct branches increased significantly as the estrogen dose was raised from the 25 .mu.g threshold to 35 or to 70 .mu.g. Ratios between area and branching remained constant under all experimental conditions. Regional, dose-dependent, differences in gland-pair response were also observed at 5 wk. Mammary gland pairs differed significantly in several growth parameters. The 3rd gland pair was smaller in area and had fewer branches, but the opposite was true of the 2nd and 4th gland pairs. Systemic injection of high doses of 17.beta.-estradiol into neonates reduced differences in growth parameters between gland pairs.