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1.
Mammary epithelial cells were prepared by collagenase digestion of tissue from mid-pregnant rabbits and cultured for up to 6 days on either collagen gels or an extracellular matrix prepared from the same tissue. The behaviour of the cells in serum-supplemented medium containing combinations of insulin, prolactin, hydrocortisone, estradiol and progesterone were monitored by measuring rates of casein synthesis, lactose synthesis, DNA synthesis and protein degradation. After 6 days, epithelial cells on floating collagen gels showed substantial increases in casein synthesis and DNA synthesis over freshly-prepared cells, following a decline during the first 3 days when the collagen gels are contracting. The optimum hormone combination for casein synthesis was insulin + prolactin + hydrocortisone, whereas for optimum DNA synthesis the additional presence of estradiol and progesterone was required. Cells on extracellular matrix showed increased rates of both casein synthesis and DNA synthesis by day 6 in the presence of insulin + prolactin + hydrocortisone, with additional estradiol + progesterone having an inhibitory effect. Whereas on day 2 rates of intracellular protein degradation were generally lower in cells on extracellular matrix, by day 6 rates of protein degradation were lowest in cells cultured on collagen gels with insulin + prolactin + hydrocortisone. In all cases, rates of lactose synthesis fell to low levels as the culture proceeded. Pulse-chase labelling of freshly-prepared cells with [32P]orthophosphate in medium containing serum and insulin + prolactin + hydrocortisone demonstrated that newly-synthesized casein was degraded during its passage through the epithelial cell. The influences of the collagen gels and extracellular matrix and of the hormone combinations on epithelial cell differentiation and secretory activity are discussed.  相似文献   

2.
Mammary glands from BALB/cfC3H midpregnant (9–11 days) mice were dissociated with collagenase and pronase, separated on a Percoll gradient, and the epithelial cells were cultured inside collagen gel. The cell number increased three-to five-fold when cultured for 6–8 days in DME/F12 (1: 1) medium containing 3% swine serum, insulin (10 μg/ml), cortisol (1.0 μg/ml), prolactin (10 μg/ml), transferrin (10 μg/ml), and epidermal growth factor (0.01 μg/ml). The casein level, as determined by radioimmunoassay, at the end of this growth phase, was much lower than that present in freshly dissociated cells. In order to stimulate casein production, the gels were released from the sides of the plastic dish and allowed to float for eight days in Waymouth's medium, containing insulin (10 μg/ml), cortisol (5 μg/ml), prolactin (10 μg/ml), and 0.25% bovine serum albumin. The casein level at the end of this differentiation phase was found to be comparable to that seen in the original freshly dissociated cells. Cells grown in DME/F12 (1: 1) medium containing 3% swine serum, insulin (10 μg/ml), and transferrin (10 μg/ml) were still capable of undergoing casein production, indicating that the presence of exogenous lactogenic hormones such as cortisol and prolactin, as well as exogenous growth factors such as epidermal growth factor, is not necessary during the growth phase for subsequent casein production during the differentiation phase. Two factors that seemed more important for subsequent casein stimulation were: (1) releasing collagen gels at the beginning of the differentiation phase, and (2) switching to'differentiation' medium. This present two-step protocol has allowed primary cultures of dissociated midpregnant mouse mammary epithelial cells to undergo several rounds of division inside a collagen gel matrix and to be subsequently stimulated to produce the mammary-specific protein, casein.  相似文献   

3.
Summary Entire second thoracic mammary glands of estrogen- and progesterone-treated immature virgin BALB/c mice were stimulated to pregnancylike lobuloalveolar morphogenesis after 6 days of incubation with insulin (5 μg/ml), aldosterone (1 μg/ml), growth hormone (5 μg/ml), cortisol (5 μg/ml), and prolactin (80 ng/ml, present as a contaminant in 5 μg/ml growth hormone). The alveolar growth in the glands, as judged by morphological studies, was accompanied by an increase in cell number as a function of incubation time in the hormonal medium. Hybridization of the total RNA from these glands to the casein mRNA specific complementary DNA probe (cDNAcsn) revealed that the level of casein mRNA rises from 0.00012 to 0.005% between 1 and 6 days of incubation. Estimates showed that the concentration of casein mRNA per cell rises 17-fold from 70 molecules on Day 1 to 1200 molecules on Day 6, whereas the number of epithelial cells increases only twofold during the same incubation time. When the growth hormone preparation was totally replaced by 80 ng of prolactin during the 6-day incubation, casein-mRNA levels were found to be 0.0083%. These results demonstrate that a pregnancy-like morphogenesis and concurrent expression of the casein gene in vitro can be achieved in a controlled hormone environment containing high cortisol and low prolactin concentrations. This one-step mammogenesis-lactogenesis culture model should be useful for studying the mechanisms of hormonal regulation of casein-gene expression observed in prepartum mammary gland in vivo. This work was supported by Department of Health, Education and Welfare Grants CA11058 and CA25304 from the National Cancer Institute.  相似文献   

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6.
Cryopreserved bovine mammary epithelial cells prepared from lactating mammary tissue synthesize and secrete the milk proteins alphas1-casein, lactoferrin (Lf), and alpha-lactalhumin during in vitro culture on collagen gels in serum-free medium. Each milk protein is differently regulated by detachment and thickness of the collagen substratum, fetal calf scrum, and prolactin in the medium. Collagen detachment did not modulate lactoferrin secretion but strongly induced casein secretion, with detachment on day 6 (after formation of cell sheets) inducing casein secretion to 3 μg/ml medium, which was 2–3-fold higher than for cells on collagen detached on day 2 (prior to cell spreading to form sheets), and ten-fold higher than for cells grown on collagen not detached. Alpha-lactalbumin secretion was also induced, but only to low levels, in cells grown on detached but not on attached collagen. Cells grown on thin collagen gels secreted lower levels of lactoferrin and casein compared to cells on thick collagen. Lactoferrin but not casein secretion was increased in cells grown in the presence of fetal calf serum. Casein but not lactoferrin secretion was completely dependent on prolactin. Cells grown serum-free on collagen gels detached on day 6 of culture showed a polarized epithelial cell layer with high differentiation evidenced by the apical microvilli, tight junctions, and fat droplets surrounded by casein-containing secretory vesicles. An underlying layer of myoepithelial-like cells was also evident. These studies show for eryopreserved primary bovine mammary cells prepared from lactating mammary tissue the induction of highly differentiated and polarized cell morphology and ultrastructure with concomitant induction of the secretion of casein, lactoferrin. and alpha-lactalbumin in vitro, and that the non-coordinate regulation of milk protein secretion by substratum, prolactin, and serum likely involves alternate routing and control of secretion pathways for casein and lactoferrin.  相似文献   

7.
8.
Summary Cortisol was previously shown to elicit a concentration-dependent inhibition of α-lactalbumin accumulation in midpregnant mouse mammary gland cultured in medium containing optimal concentrations of 5 μg/ml prolactin and insulin. In contrast, casein accumulation under these conditions was progressively stimulated by addition of increasing amounts of cortisol (Ono, M.; Oka, T. Cell 19: 473–480; 1980). In the present study we found that in the presence of a suboptimal concentration of 0.5 μg/ml prolactin, 2.8×10−9 M to 2.8×10−7 M cortisol stimulated α-lactalbumin accumulation. Furthermore, higher concentrations of cortisol produced a smaller inhibition of α-lactalbumin accumulation as compared to that obtained in cultures containing 5 μg/ml prolactin. The maximal increase in α-lactalbumin accumulation attained in the presence of 1.4×10−8 M cortisol, 0.5 μg/ml prolactin, and insulin was comparable to that observed in culture containing 5 μg/ml prolactin and insulin. Similar results were obtained in a cortisol concentration-response study of α-lactalbumin accumulation in cultures containing a suboptimal concentration of 0.5 μg/ml human placental lactogen. Measurement of the rate of α-lactalbumin synthesis in cultured tissue indicated that the opposing effects of low and high concentrations of cortisol on α-lactalbumin accumulation involved an alteration in the rate of synthesis of the milk protein. In contrast to α-lactalbumin, the synthesis of casein was stimulated in a concentration-dependent manner by addition of cortisol that acted synergistically with either 0.5 μg/ml or 5 μg/ml prolactin. The maximal increases were obtained in the presence of 2.8×10−6 M cortisol. These results indicated that the action of cortisol on α-lactalbumin accumulation can be modulated by the concentration, of prolactin and suggest that the interplay between cortisol and prolactin in regulation of α-lactalbumin synthesis may be different from that involved in casein synthesis.  相似文献   

9.
Summary Epithelial cells from mouse seminal vesicles were enzymatically dissociated enriched by gradient centrifugation, and maintained in collagen gel cultures with defined (serum-free) media. The epithelial origin of the cells was determined morhologically, immunocytochemically, and biochemically. Cells formed three-dimensional colonies with a lumen in collagen gels. Cell number was increased eight-fold within a 8 to 12-d culture period in a medium supplemented with epidermal growth factor (EGF) (10 ng/ml), insulin (10 μg/ml), transferrin (10 μg/ml), cholera toxin (10 ng/ml), and hydrocortisone (0.1 μg/ml). The cells required eGF and insulin; the growth-promoting effects of these two peptide hormones were optimized by transferrin, cholera toxin, and hydrocortisone. Fetal bovine serum did not support growth; rather, it suppressed the stimulated growth observed in serum-free media. A time-course study revealed that a lag period preceded rapi growth. The collagen gel, serum-free culture provides a powerful tool to study the effects of hormones on proliferation and differentiation of androgen sensitive cells.  相似文献   

10.
Summary A serum-free primary culture system has been developed which allows for three-dimensional growth and differentiation of normal rat mammary epithelial cells (RMECs) within an extracellular matrix preparation. RMECs were isolated from mamary glands of immature 50- to 60-d-old rats and the organoids embedded within a reconstituted basement membrane matrix prepared from the Engelbreth-Holm-Swarm sarcoma. Cells grown in a serum-free media consisting of phenol red-free Dulbecco's modified Eagle's medium-F12 culture medium containing 10 μg/ml insulin, 1 μg/ml prolactin, 1 μg/ml progesterone, 1 μg/ml hydrocortisone, 10 ng/ml epidermal growth factor (EGF), 1 mg/ml fatty-acid-free bovine serum albumin (BSA), 5 μg/ml transferrin, and 5 μM ascorbic acid proliferated extensively (15- to 20-fold increase in cell number as quantitated using the MTT dye assay) over a 2- to 3-wk culture period and remained viable for months in culture. Several types of colonies were observed including the alveolarlike budding cluster which predominates at later times in culture, units with no or various degrees of ductal-like projections, stellate colonies, and two-and three-dimensional web units. Optimal proliferation required insulin, prolactin, progesterone, EGF, and bovine serum albumin. Hydrocortisone was not required for proliferation, but the colonies developing in its absence were morphologically altered, with a high frequency of colonies that formed an extensively branched network with many fine projections. Cell proliferation was also dependent on substratum, with significantly less growth and development occurring in RMECs grown within a type I collagen gel matrix compared to RMECs grown within the reconstituted basement membrane. In conjunction with other studies demonstrating extensive differentiation as well as proliferation, it is concluded that this model should prove to be an improtant tool to study the hormonal regulation of the growth and development of rat mammary cells. This work was supported by grants CA 33240 and CA 35641 and by core grant CA 24538 from the National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, MD.  相似文献   

11.
Mouse mammary epithelial cells cultivated on collagen gels synthesize and secrete casein in a hormone-dependent manner. Fine-structure electron microscopy of secretory cultures revealed numerous cytoplasmic structures surrounded by membrane that is studded with ribosomes. The structures appear to be distended rough endoplasmic reticulum (RER). Electron microscope protein A-colloidal gold immunolocalization showed casein antiserum-specific deposition of gold particles over the RER cytoplasmic vesicles in cells provided insulin, prolactin, and hydrocortisone (IPF). Nonimmune antiserum showed no gold particle deposition over these cytoplasmic structures. Epithelia provided only insulin showed no such cytoplasmic vesicles nor any specific deposition of gold particles. Immunoblot analysis of cell lysate and culture medium showed casein only in IPF-treated cultures. It appears that the casein secretory pathway in collagen gel cultured mammary epithelia is blocked at the step that fuses RER vesicles to Golgi membrane. The data raise questions regarding the processing and maturation of casein and the mechanism of casein secretion in these cultures.  相似文献   

12.
Summary An improved serum-free medium has been developed that supports growth of rat mammary tumor line 64–24 with far less protein supplementation and with a much smaller inoculum than previously possible. An initial survey showed that MCDB 202 supported clonal growth with 1% dialyzed serum. The remaining serum was then replaced with 5 μg/ml insulin, 10 ng/ml epidermal growth factor (EGF), 1 μg/ml hydrocortisone, 50 ng/ml ovine prolactin, and 5 μg/ml liposome B (a mixture of soy lecithin, sphingomyelin, cholesterol, vitamin E, and vitamin E acetate in liposome form). Insulin and EGF are required and growth is improved by hydrocortisone and prolactin. Estradiol is stimulatory in the absence of liposome B. With adequate iron supplementation, transferrin has no effect. Liposome B increases growth rate substantially. Most of the growth stimulation can be replaced with phosphatidylethanolamine or sphingomyelin. This paper contains material from a thesis submitted to the Graduate School of the University of Colorado, Boulder, by B.A.VdH. in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the Ph.D. degree. This research was supported by grant CA-15305 to R.G.H. and grant CA-30545 to T.K.-S., both from the National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, MD.  相似文献   

13.
Mouse glycosylation-dependent cell adhesion molecule 1 (GlyCAM-1), also known as mC26 and homologous to bovine PP3, is a milk protein synthesized in the mammary gland. Several studies have investigated the regulation of casein, the major milk protein, gene in the mammary gland, but little is known about GlyCAM-1. Here we examined GlyCAM-1 gene expression in mouse mammary epithelial cells. First, we detected GlyCAM-1 expression in mammary epithelial cells in situ by immunohistochemistry; almost all mammary epithelial cells of the lactating mouse expressed GlyCAM-1. Second, mammary epithelial cells were digested with collagenase and cultured with insulin, prolactin and/or glucocorticoid. alpha-Casein and beta-casein genes were expressed following treatment with insulin, prolactin and glucocorticoid. In contrast, GlyCAM-1 expression could not be detected with any combination of these three hormones. We also analyzed changes in the levels of GlyCAM-1 and caseins mRNAs in cultured cells. The addition of hormones to the culture medium increased casein mRNAs, but surprisingly reduced GlyCAM-1 mRNA. Our results suggest that the mechanisms that regulate GlyCAM-1 gene in mammary cells of lactating mice are different from those involved in the regulation of casein genes.  相似文献   

14.
Summary The organ culture of the mammary gland of lactating mice was used to examine the response of the differentiated gland to lactogenic stimuli, insulin, cortisol, and prolactin. Time course studies showed that casein synthesis in cultured tissue decreased rapidly during the first 2 d despite the presence of the three hormones, but on the 3rd d tissue cultured with either insulin and prolactin or all three hormones regained the ability to synthesize milk proteins, casein, and α-lactalbumin: a greater increase occurred in the three hormone system. The delayed addition of prolactin on Day 2 to the culture system containing insulin and cortisol also stimulated casein synthesis. The addition of cytarabine, which inhibited insulin-dependent cell proliferation in cultured explants, did not block the rebound of milk protein synthesis. The results indicate that in the presence of insulin, cortisol, and prolactin mammary epithelial cells in culture first lose and then regain the ability of synthesizing milk protein without requiring the formation of new daughter cells.  相似文献   

15.
The metabolism of nuclear proteins was studied at differentiation of mammary cells in the tissue culture with lactogenic hormones. The synthesis of nuclear acidic proteins under the influence of insulin is shown to be an initial step in cell differentiation of the gland; later the DNA synthesis is stimulated, and the synthesis and phosphorylation of histones are intestified. The inducing action of prolactin on the synthesis of RNA and casein is displayed only after the action of insulin and hydrocortisone on the tissue.  相似文献   

16.
We examined the responsiveness to prolactin and growth hormone of mammary epithelial cells from mice exposed neonatally to diethylstilbestrol (DES) and from control mice. The mammary epithelial cells were cultured inside collagen gels with serum-free medium containing insulin, epidermal growth factor, and linoleic acid. This produces prolactin-sensitive cells with low levels of casein production, as measured in cellular homogenates with a specific enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay for alpha-casein. The collagen gels containing these cells were then released and the medium supplements changed to insulin, linoleic acid, and prolactin at concentrations from 10 to 1000 ng/ml and growth hormone at 0, 10, or 100 ng/ml. This second phase of the culture, the differentiation phase, allows the cells to accumulate casein if they have this capacity. When cultured with prolactin only (no growth hormone), the cells from DES-exposed mice consistently accumulated 50-100% of the casein content of normal cells, but never more. Growth hormone, when added to prolactin-containing medium, increased casein accumulation above the levels seen with prolactin alone. Combinations of prolactin and growth hormone enhanced the difference between casein accumulation in DES-exposed and control cells, and DES-exposed cells were much less responsive to growth hormone. In our studies, the isolated mammary epithelial cells of estrogen-exposed mice are not more sensitive to prolactin than cells from normal animals as previous reports reports had suggested, but rather are generally less sensitive to hormonal stimulants.  相似文献   

17.
V N Katiyar  J Enami  S Nandi 《In vitro》1978,14(9):771-774
The in vitro effects of protein hormones on the stimulation of casein secretion by mouse mammary epithelial cells were studied. Mouse mammary glands were enzymatically dissociated and used immediately or were stored frozen and thawed just before use. Cells were cultured on floating collagen gels in the presence of insulin, cortisol and a pituitary or placental polypeptide hormone. Casein, released into the medium, was assayed by a radioimmunoassay against one of the components of mouse casein. Mammary cells released casein into the medium in the presence of as little as 10 ng of ovine prolactin per ml of medium. Human growth hormone stimulated the casein secretion to the same extent as prolactin. Human placental lactogen, ovine and bovine growth hormones were less stimulatory. Luteinizing hormone, follicle-stimulating hormone and thyroid-stimulating hormone had no effect on the stimulation of casein secretion.  相似文献   

18.
When mammary gland explants from mid-pregnant rats were incubated with insulin (5 μg/ml) and [3H]cortisol (5 μg/ml) for one day, the tissue accumulated 1.69 μg cortisol/g wet tissue. During a second incubation with insulin and prolactin (5 μg/ml), only 20% of the steroid was lost per day. Such retention of glucocorticoid had an important biological consequence: the tissue exposed for one day to insulin and cortisol showed a transient stimulation of casein synthesis during a subsequent, five-day incubation with insulin and prolactin. No casein synthesis was detected, if the first culture medium contained only insulin. In conclusion, mammary gland explants from mid-pregnant rats require a glucocorticoid for casein synthesis, but this requirement may be obscured if the explants are initially incubated in medium containing cortisol, since they are capable of accumulating and retaining this steroid. Similar interpretative difficulties may arise in studies on other steroid-tissue relationships.  相似文献   

19.
Summary The in vitro effects of protein hormones on the stimulation of casein secretion by mouse mammary epithelial cells were studied. Mouse mammary glands were enzymatically dissociated and used immediately or were stored frozen and thawed just before use. Cells were cultured on floating collagen gels in the presence of insulin, cortisol and a pituitary or placental polypeptide hormone. Casein, released into the medium, was assayed by a radioimmunoassay against one of the components of mouse casein. Mammary cells released casein into the medium in the presence of as little as 10 ng of ovine prolactin per ml of medium. Human growth hormone stimulated the casein secretion to the same extent as prolactin. Human placental lactogen, ovine and bovine growth hormones were less stimulatory. Luteinizing hormone, follicle-stimulating hormone and thyroid-stimulating hormone had no effect on the stimulation of casein secretion. This investigation was supported by Grant No. CA 05388 awarded by the National Cancer Institute, DHEW, and by Cancer Research Funds of the University of California.  相似文献   

20.
In order to reduce cellular complexity in the study of the controls of the biochemical differentiation of mammary gland epithelium, approximately 100-fold purified epithelial cells from the mammary glands of virgin BALB/c mice were grown in three-dimensional collagen gels, and formed colonies that resembled mammary ductules. Here we report the induction of a biochemical differentiation in these purified epithelial cells in response to appropriate hormonal signals, starting from the state in the virgin mammary gland and ending with the stage characteristic of lactation. Induction of the synthesis of caseins was examined as a marker of mammary functional differentiation using sensitive immunologic autoradiography. The cells were maximally induced by the combination of the hormones, insulin, prolactin, aldosterone, and hydrocortisone, in both serum-containing and essentially serum-free media. The induction required insulin and prolactin, and was enhanced by the presence of the steroids. The cellular distribution of the induction was general, inasmuch as three-quarters of the hormone-stimulated cells were casein-positive according to immunocytochemistry. In order to assess the role of the three-dimensional conformation in the induction process, the purified mammary epithelial cells were grown as monolayers on plastic and collagen-coated surfaces. In these two-dimensional cultures, the synthesis of casein was not induced, suggesting that cell shape, orientation, and multicellular organization are important parameters in the hormonal induction of the biochemical differentiation. The finding of the induction of differentiation-specific proteins in cultures of purified epithelial cells from virgin glands allows examination of the molecular mechanisms involved in the complete induction process in the virtual absence of fat cells, fibroblasts, and the complex assortment of biochemical constituents of the mammary fat pad.  相似文献   

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