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Journal of Endocrinology (1981) 90, 237-244    DOI: 10.1677/joe.0.0900237
© 1981 Society for Endocrinology

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SUCKLING IN THE GUINEA-PIG: THE EFFECTS OF PASSIVE IMMUNIZATION WITH AN ANTISERUM TO OXYTOCIN

I. C. A. F. ROBINSON and J. A. PARSONS

Lactating guinea-pigs were passively immunized with an antiserum to oxytocin of high titre, specificity and avidity. Single i.v. injections of 0·1–0·4 ml antiserum produced high titres which decayed slowly (half-life ~=7 days). Passively administered antiserum was effective in vivo; the clearance of exogenous oxytocin from plasma was greatly slowed in immunized animals. Passive immunization with 0·4 ml antiserum reduced milk transfer to the litter during suckling episodes of 10 min, and overall litter growth rates were significantly decreased. Non-immune serum was without effect. Plasma neurophysin levels showed the same large rises during suckling in immunized animals, indicating that neurohypophysial activation was unimpaired. Despite the presence of high titres of antiserum, some milk transfer still occurred at milk ejection. In-vitro experiments showed that more than 25% of oxytocin remained free 20 s after mixing with plasma taken from passively immunized animals. It is probable that the antiserum in the circulation was unable to bind all the oxytocin released from the posterior pituitary gland before it reached the mammary gland.







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Copyright © 1981 by the Society for Endocrinology.