Effects of suppression and resumption of shell formation and parathyroid hormone on uterine calcium-binding protein, carbonic anhydrase activity, and intestinal calcium absorption in hens

1986 
Abstract The calcium absorption and duodenal and uterine vitamin D-dependent calcium-binding protein (CaBP-28K) levels were decreased in hens when eggshell calcification was suppressed by premature expulsion of the egg. Nevertheless, these levels remained higher than those of immature pullets or pullets treated with estrogen. The resumption of shell formation by hens which had previously laid soft-shell eggs was associated during calcification of the first egg with increases in intestinal Ca absorption, CaBP concentration, and alkaline phosphatase activity. The increase in uterine CaBP concentration preceded the stage of rapid calcium deposition. Uterine carbonic anhydrase activity was increased by sexual maturity but not consistently by shell formation. Ablation of the parathyroids just before the resumption of shell formation suppressed the increases in duodenal calcium absorption and CaBP concentration elicited by egg calcification. In contrast, the increase in CaBP level was maintained in the uterus of parathyroidectomized hens, in spite of the decreased shell deposition. Previous studies indicated that increased uterine CaBP associated with eggshell calcification is not elicited by vitamin D. The present study confirms this observation and also shows that these changes are not elicited by either PTH or sex steroid hormones.
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