In some species, including man and mouse, bile salt-stimulated lipase (BSSL) in milk catalyzes the hydrolysis of triacylglycerides
into glycerol and free fatty acids, a reaction that is of particular importance during suckling. The enzyme is also secreted
by the pancreas (referred to as carboxyl-ester hydrolase, CEH). We wished to localize sources and storage sites for BSSL/CEH
in rats, in wild-type mice, and in transgenic mice producing recombinant human BSSL in milk. Immunoreactivity against several
BSSL fragments was strong in the pancreatic acinar cells and moderate in the absorptive cells of the small intestine and in
salivary duct cells of the mice, as well as in rats. Sections from lactating mammary glands of mouse, but not rat, also showed
immunoreactivity for BSSL; the signal was strongest in the transgenic mice. Radioactive riboprobes for BSSL mRNA hybridized
on sections of rat and mouse pancreatic acinar cells, and mouse mammary glands (both wild-type and transgenic). Using RT-PCR,
it was possible to amplify BSSL mRNA from wild-type mouse pancreas and mammary gland, from rat submandibular glands, and,
in a few cases, from rat liver. In transgenic mice, the BSSL mRNA was highly expressed only in lactating mammary gland, but
could be detected in a few other organs as well.
Accepted: 31 March 1998