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First published online on December 5, 2007
Endocrine Reviews, doi:10.1210/er.2007-0017
A more recent version of this article appeared on February 1, 2008
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Submitted on June 13, 2007
Accepted on October 26, 2007

What Can We Learn from Rodents about Prolactin in Humans?

Nira Ben-Jonathan*, Christopher R. LaPensee, and Elizabeth W. LaPensee

Department of Cell and Cancer Biology, University of Cincinnati Medical School, Cincinnati, Ohio 45267

* To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: Nira.Ben-Jonathan{at}uc.edu.

Prolactin (PRL) is a 23-kDa protein hormone that binds to a single-span membrane receptor, a member of the cytokine receptor superfamily, and exerts its action via several interacting signaling pathways. PRL is a multifunctional hormone that affects multiple reproductive and metabolic functions and is also involved in tumorigenicity. In addition to being a classical pituitary hormone, PRL in humans is produced by many tissues throughout the body where it acts as a cytokine. The objective of this review is to compare and contrast multiple aspects of PRL, from structure to regulation, and from physiology to pathology in rats, mice, and humans. At each juncture, questions are raised whether, or to what extent, data from rodents are relevant to PRL homeostasis in humans. Most current knowledge on PRL has been obtained from studies with rats, and more recently, from the use of transgenic mice. Although this information is indispensable for understanding PRL in human health and disease, there is sufficient disparity in the control of the production, distribution and physiological functions of PRL among these species to warrant careful and judicial extrapolation to humans.







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