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Transformed growth phenotype of mouse mammary epithelium in primary culture induced by specific fetal mesenchymes.
Authors:T Kanazawa  H L Hosick
Institution:Department of Zoology, Washington State University, Pullman 99164-4236.
Abstract:When mesenchyme from fetal mammary or salivary gland is implanted into adult mouse mammary gland, adjacent epithelium responds with intense hyperplasia. The hyperplastic cells are more vulnerable than are non-stimulated cells to transformation in vivo by a chemical carcinogen or by mammary tumor virus. This system provides a potentially useful model for determining how stroma contributes to mammary tumorigenesis. We have developed co-culture systems and used them to investigate in more detail the nature of the signal produced by the mesenchyme cells. Monolayers of mesenchyme cells were prepared on tissue-culture wells. The mesenchyme cells were trapped on the surface by a thin overlay of agarose. Primary mammary epithelial cells were cultured atop this barrier layer, either as organoids in collagen gels for assessment of anchorage-dependent growth, or as single-cell dispersions in soft agarose for assessment of anchorage-independent growth. Our procedures for assay of anchorage-independent growth allow us for the first time to detect and measure this transformation-defining characteristic in non-immortalized mammary epithelial cells in primary culture. Fetal mammary fat pad precursor tissue and fetal salivary mesenchyme both stimulated anchorage-dependent growth of mammary epithelium, with cell number increasing as much as fifteenfold during a 6-day culture period. These same fetal tissues also stimulated anchorage-independent growth of the mammary epithelial cells, with colony-forming efficiencies of up to 40% in co-cultures with salivary mesenchyme. No colonies formed in the absence of mesenchyme. Cells of colonies contained keratin, which indicates that the colonies grew from epithelial cells and not from a contaminant of another cell type. When co-cultured epithelial cells were subsequently re-cultured in the absence of mesenchyme, they lost their ability to grow independent of anchorage. No colonies grew in co-cultures with fetal cells from heart, kidney, or lung, which is consistent with the lack of stimulation by these tissues in the mammary gland in vivo. A tumor promoter, 12-O-tetradecanoylphorbol acetate (TPA), also caused anchorage-independent growth of the dispersed mammary epithelial cells. Culture medium conditioned by primary or early-passage salivary mesenchyme cells was capable of stimulating growth under both anchorage-dependent and anchorage-independent conditions, confirming that these effects are mediated by a paracrine factor. The results indicate that stimulatory fetal mesenchymes produce soluble molecules that act analogously to transforming growth factors.
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