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Original Paper

Milk-protein mRNAs and poly(A) in the involuting rat mammary gland return to the levels found during late pregnancy

Vasek A. Mezl, Susan Nadin-Davis
Bioscience Reports Apr 01, 1984, 4 (4) ; DOI: 10.1007/BF01140500
Vasek A. Mezl
Department of Biochemistry, Health Sciences Centre, University of Ottawa, Ottawa, Ont., Canada, K1H 8M5
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Susan Nadin-Davis
Department of Biochemistry, Health Sciences Centre, University of Ottawa, Ottawa, Ont., Canada, K1H 8M5*Division of Biological Sciences, National Research Council, Ottawa, Ontario, Canada, K1A OR6
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Abstract

Analyses of the rat mammary gland show that the increase in the milk-protein mRNAs during the development of lactation and the rapid disappearance of these sequences during involution are not accompanied by similar changes in the poly(A) content. During the development of lactation the casein mRNA is initially in great excess to the whey-protein mRNA and this differential expression of the genes for the two types of milk proteins is again observed during early involution. Since the amounts of poly(A) and of both milk-protein mRNAs are also similar to the amounts found in the gland during late pregnancy, these results indicate that during early involution the mammary gland has reverted to the pattern of mRNA metabolism that occurs during late pregnancy.

  • © 1984 The Biochemical Society
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April 1984

Volume: 4 Issue: 4

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Milk-protein mRNAs and poly(A) in the involuting rat mammary gland return to the levels found during late pregnancy
Vasek A. Mezl, Susan Nadin-Davis
Bioscience Reports Apr 1984, 4 (4) 359-364; DOI: 10.1007/BF01140500
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Milk-protein mRNAs and poly(A) in the involuting rat mammary gland return to the levels found during late pregnancy
Vasek A. Mezl, Susan Nadin-Davis
Bioscience Reports Apr 1984, 4 (4) 359-364; DOI: 10.1007/BF01140500

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