Erythropoiesis was stimulated in 2- to 5-day-old neonatal rats suckled by phlebotomized mothers. This was established by increases in: hemoglobin levels, mean corpuscular hemoglobin concentration and percentages of peripheral reticulocytes. The oral administration of cow milk containing 4 IU human erythropoietin (Ep) to 10-day-old normal neonates for 4 days induced a reticulocytosis. Significant amounts of Ep appeared in the plasma of 1-day-old rats nursed by mothers bled 3 days prior to delivery as compared to nondetectable levels in 1-day-old control rats of normal mothers. The data suggest that Ep is transmitted to neonatal rats via maternal milk, and escapes inactivation, at least to some extent, in the process of absorption from the gastrointestinal tract with consequent stimulation of erythropoiesis in these animals.
Three strains of Caldariomycesfumago were immobilized in 4% k-carrageenan and tested for semicontinuous production of chloroperoxidase (CPO). Over an 80-day period, growing in defined medium, C. fumago strains
Twelve-day-old hypertransfused neonatal rats nursed for four days by a twice-bled mother exhibited higher 48-hour RBC-59Fe incorporation than control neonates nursed by a normal mother. Erythroprotein (Ep) in plasma of 12-day-old hypertransfused neonates suckled for four days to twice-bled mothers was initially equivalent to approximately 0.5 IU/day. This calculation was based on the observation that reticulocytosis induced in these animals was similar to that produced in neonates of the same age injected intraperitoneally with 0.5 IU Ep for four days while nursing from normal mothers. The reticulocyte maturation curve was shifted to the left in 12-day-old hypertransfused neonates suckled by anemic mothers, and in 12-day-old normal neonates rendered anemic by bleeding, while nursing from normal mothers. This left-shift of the reticulocyte maturation curve was also evident in 12-day-old hypertransfused neonates injected with Ep. Decreases in relative percentages of nucleated RBC was evident in spleens of 12-day-old neonates nursed by anemia mothers and spleens of 12-day-olds injected with Ep. Significant reduction in nucleated RBC were noted in both spleen and marrow of 12-day-old anemic neonates. These results suggest: (1) Ep, present in increased amounts in the anemic mother, is transmitted through milk to nursing neonates thereby stimulating erythropoiesis in these animals; (2) Ep may not stimulate stem cell differentiation towards the e4ythroid compartment but rather acts on already differentiated erythroid cells by influencing their rate of maturation.
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