Serotonin promotes calcium accumulation and inhibits lipid accumulation in cultured goat mammary epithelial cells through HTR2A
ZhiFei Zhang, BinHan Li, YingFei Wang, Tumaresi Abuduwufuer, Kang Hu, HuiLing Zheng

TL;DR
Serotonin reduces fat and increases calcium in goat mammary cells via the HTR2A receptor, which could help improve milk quality.
Contribution
This study identifies HTR2A as a key mediator of serotonin's effects on lipid and calcium regulation in goat mammary cells.
Findings
Serotonin inhibits lipid synthesis and promotes calcium accumulation in goat mammary epithelial cells.
Overexpression of HTR2A mimics serotonin's effects on lipid and calcium regulation.
Blocking HTR2A reverses the inhibition of lipid synthesis by serotonin.
Abstract
Fatty acids and calcium are both important nutrients in goat milk. Investigating the upstream molecular regulatory mechanisms that control the synthesis of milk fat and milk calcium in the mammary gland can help improve the quality of milk at its source. The objective of this study was to investigate the effects and regulatory pathways of serotonin (5-hydroxytryptamine, 5-HT) and its receptors on lipid synthesis and calcium ion levels in goat mammary epithelial cells (GMECs). GMECs isolated from live goats were treated with serotonin, overexpression of Serotonin receptor 2A (HTR2A), Sarpogrelate ([SAR] the specific antagonist of HTR2A), or a combination of these agents. The expression of genes related to de novo lipid synthesis in GMECs were detected using the Quantitative Real-Time polymerase chain reaction, the content of lipid droplets was detected using the BODIPY assay, and the…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMeat and Animal Product Quality
