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1.
Marsupials provide a suitable alternative model to studying mammary gland involution. They have evolved a different reproductive strategy from eutherians, giving birth to an altricial young and secreting milk that changes in composition during lactation. In this study, we used a marsupial-specific EST microarray to identify 47 up-regulated genes during mammary gland involution in the tammar wallaby (Macropus eugenii). These include the pro-apoptotic tumour necrosis factor receptor superfamily 21 (TNFRSF21) gene, whose expression in the mammary gland has not previously been reported. Genes encoding putative novel milk proteins which may protect the mammary gland from infection were also found to be up-regulated, such as amiloride binding protein 1 (ABP1), complement component 1QB (C1QB), complement component 4A (C4A) and colony stimulating factor 2 receptor β (CSF2Rβ). Our results show that the marsupial reproductive strategy was successfully exploited to identify genes and putative novel milk proteins implicated in mammary gland involution.  相似文献   

2.
Various types of collagen have been identified as potential ligands for the two mammalian discoidin domain receptor tyrosine kinases, DDR1 and DDR2. Here, we used a recombinant fusion protein between the extracellular domain of DDR1 and alkaline phosphatase to detect specific receptor binding sites during mouse development. Major sites of DDR1-binding activity, indicative of ligand expression, were found in skeletal bones, the skin, and the urogenital tract. Ligand expression in the uterus during implantation and in the mammary gland during pregnancy colocalized with the expression of the DDR1 receptor. The generation of DDR1-null mice by gene targeting yielded homozygous mutant animals that were viable but smaller in size than control littermates. The majority of mutant females were unable to bear offspring due to a lack of proper blastocyst implantation into the uterine wall. When implantation did occur, the mutant females were unable to lactate. Histological analysis showed that the alveolar epithelium failed to secrete milk proteins into the lumen of the mammary gland. The lactational defect appears to be caused by hyperproliferation and abnormal branching of mammary ducts. These results suggest that DDR1 is a key mediator of the stromal-epithelial interaction during ductal morphogenesis in the mammary gland.  相似文献   

3.
DDR1 signaling is essential to sustain Stat5 function during lactogenesis   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Postnatal development of the mammary gland is achieved by an interplay of endocrine and extracellular matrix-derived signals. Despite intense research, a comprehensive understanding of the temporal and spatial coordination of these hormonal and basement membrane stimuli is still lacking. Here, we address the role of the collagen-receptor DDR1 in integrating extracellular matrix-derived signaling with the lactogenic pathway initiated by the prolactin receptor. We found that stimulation of DDR1-overexpressing mammary epithelial HC11 cells with collagen and prolactin resulted in stronger and more sustained induction of Stat5 phosphorylation as compared to control cells. Enhanced Stat5 activity in HC11-DDR1 cells correlated with increased beta-casein gene expression. In contrast, cells derived from DDR1-null mice showed reduced Stat5 activation upon lactogenic stimulation and completely failed to induce beta-casein expression. The cell-autonomous role of DDR1 in controlling ductal branching and alveologenesis prior to the onset of lactogenesis was corroborated by mammary tissue transplantation experiments. Our results show that aside from hormone- and cytokine receptors, DDR1 signaling establishes a third matrix-derived pathway vital to maintain mammary gland function.  相似文献   

4.
The vitamin D receptor (VDR) is present in mammary gland, and VDR ablation is associated with accelerated glandular development during puberty. VDR is a nuclear receptor whose ligand, 1,25-dihydroxyvitamin D [1,25-(OH)(2)D] is generated after metabolic activation of vitamin D by specific vitamin D hydroxylases. In these studies, we demonstrate that both the VDR and the vitamin D 1-alpha hydroxylase (CYP27B1), which produces 1,25-(OH)(2)D are present in mammary gland and dynamically regulated during pregnancy, lactation, and involution. Furthermore, we show that mice lacking VDR exhibit accelerated lobuloalveolar development and premature casein expression during pregnancy and delayed postlactational involution compared with mice with functional VDR. The delay in mammary gland regression after weaning of VDR knockout mice is associated with impaired apoptosis as demonstrated by reductions in terminal deoxynucleotidyl transferase-mediated deoxyuridine nick-end labeling staining, caspase-3 activation and Bax induction. Under the conditions used in this study, VDR ablation was not associated with hypocalcemia, suggesting that altered mammary gland development in the absence of the VDR is not related to disturbances in calcium homeostasis. Furthermore, in the setting of normocalcemia, VDR ablation does not affect milk protein or calcium content. These studies suggest that the VDR contributes to mammary cell turnover during the reproductive cycle, and its effects may be mediated via both endocrine and autocrine signaling pathways. Unlike many mammary regulatory factors that exert transient, stage-specific effects, VDR signaling impacts on mammary gland biology during all phases of the reproductive cycle.  相似文献   

5.
Activation of the receptor tyrosine kinase DDR1 by collagen results in robust and sustained phosphorylation, however little is known about its downstream mediators. Using phosphopeptide mapping and site-directed mutagenesis, we here identified multiple tyrosine phosphorylation sites within DDR1. We found that Nck2 and Shp-2, two SH2 domain-containing proteins, bind to DDR1 in a collagen-dependent manner. The binding site of Shp-2 was mapped to tyrosine-740 of DDR1 within an ITIM-consensus sequence. Lastly, ablation of DDR1 in the mouse mammary gland resulted in delocalized expression of Nck2, suggesting that defects observed during alveologenesis are caused by the lack of the DDR1-Nck2 interaction.  相似文献   

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Mammary epithelial cells undergo changes in growth, invasion, differentiation, and dedifferentiation throughout much of adult hood, and most strikingly during pregnancy, lactation, and involution. Clusterin is a multifunctional glycoprotein that is involved in the differentiation and morphogenesis of epithelia, and that is important in the regulation of postnatal mammary gland development. However, the mechanisms that regulate clusterin expression are still poorly understood. Here, we show that clusterin is up-regulated twice during mouse mammary gland development, a first time at the end of pregnancy and a second time at the beginning of the involution. These points of clusterin up-regulation coincide with the dramatic phenotypic and functional changes occurring in the mammary gland. Using cell culture conditions that resemble the regulatory microenvironment in vivo, we determined that the factors responsible for the first up-regulation of clusterin levels can include the extracellular matrix component, laminin, and the lactogenic hormones, prolactin and hydrocortisone. On the other hand, the second and most dramatic up-regulation of clusterin can be due to the potent induction by TGF-beta1, and this up-regulation by TGF-beta1 is dependent on beta1 integrin ligand-binding activity. Moreover, the level of expression of beta-casein, a marker of mammary epithelial cell differentiation, was decreased upon treatment of cells with clusterin siRNA. Overall, these findings reveal several novel pathways for the regulation of clusterin expression during mammary gland development, and suggest that clusterin is a morphogenic factor that plays a key role during differentiation.  相似文献   

8.
Eosinophils are prevalent in the female reproductive tract, where they may contribute to regulation of development and maintenance of epithelial integrity. The present study examined the effects of constitutive interleukin-5 (IL-5) expression and overabundance of eosinophils on the development and function of the mammary gland, uterus, and ovary in mice. Eosinophils were up to 13-fold and 4-fold more abundant in the uterus and mammary gland, respectively, in female IL-5 transgenic (IL-5Tg) mice than in wild-type (Wt) animals. Eosinophils were present in large numbers in regressing corpora lutea in IL-5Tg mice but not in ovaries from Wt mice. Postpubertal mammary gland development was retarded in IL-5Tg mice, with impaired terminal end bud formation and an altered pattern of epithelial cell proliferation across the mammary fat pad coincident with disrupted ductal branching and extension. By 10 wk of age, the ductal tree was complete in both genotypes. Onset of first estrus was also delayed in IL-5Tg mice, but once IL-5Tg mice reached puberty, serum estrogen content across the cycle and estrous cycle duration were normal. The histology of uterine tissue and epithelial cell turnover were unchanged. Capacity to mate and achieve pregnancy was not affected by maternal IL-5 transgene expression, although at Day 18 of gestation, a modest decrease in the fetal:placental weight ratio was observed. Furthermore, parturition and ability to lactate and nurture postnatal pup development were not compromised. These data demonstrate an effect of IL-5 overexpression on ductal morphogenesis during postpubertal mammary gland development that is consistent with a direct regulatory role for eosinophils in these events, but these data also show that eosinophil excess does not have long-term consequences for adult reproductive function.  相似文献   

9.
Parity‐dependent adenocarcinoma tumors developed in postestropausal transgenic mice expressing a constitutively active Stat5 variant (STAT5ca) in their mammary gland. These tumors maintained elevated expression levels of genes regulating the cellular DNA damage response (DDR) mechanism, compared to the intact gland. No correlation with STAT5ca expression was observed for these genes in the established tumors. However, activated Stat5a in individual cells of the rarely and earlier developed hyperplasia was associated with induced Chk2 activity. Deregulated Stat5 may already cause DNA damage during the fertile period. This hypothesis and the specific vulnerable stage were further studied in mammary epithelial cells that were stably transfected with β‐lactoglobulin (BLG)/STAT5ca and exposed to a reproduced reproductive cycle. During the pregnancy‐like proliferative state, STAT5ca expression was induced by the added lactogenic hormones. Production of reactive oxygen species, rather than proliferation, served as the primary mediator of DNA damage and cellular DDR. Differentiated cells expressed higher levels of STAT5ca and retained the DNA nicks. However, the elevated expression of the genes involved in DDR was downregulated. Higher levels of DNA damage were also detected in the mammary gland of transgenic mice expressing the BLG/STAT5ca during pregnancy and lactation. However, the relative number of damaged cells was much lower than that in the reproduced in vitro stages and the insults were generally associated with apoptosis and DDR. This study implicates pregnancy as the vulnerable stage for deregulated Stat5 activity, and demonstrates that DNA insults in viable differentiated mammary epithelial cells are ignored by the DDR mechanism. J. Cell. Physiol. 226: 616–626, 2011. © 2010 Wiley‐Liss, Inc.  相似文献   

10.
In a yeast two hybrid screen with the human isoform of Dendrin (KIAA0749), a putative modulator of the postsynaptic cytoskeleton, we isolated a cDNA coding for a novel protein, KIBRA, possessing two amino-terminal WW domains, an internal C2-like domain and a carboxy-terminal glutamic acid-rich stretch. Northern blot analysis revealed that the expression of KIBRA mRNA was predominately found in kidney and brain. In vitro interaction studies revealed that the first KIBRA WW domain binds specifically to PPxY motifs. Transient transfection of monkey kidney cells with constructs encoding Myc-tagged KIBRA displayed a cytoplasmic localization and a perinuclear enrichment of the protein.  相似文献   

11.
The role of milk extends beyond simply providing nutrition to the suckled young. Milk has a comprehensive role in programming and regulating growth and development of the suckled young, and provides a number of potential autocrine factors so that the mammary gland functions appropriately during the lactation cycle. This central role of milk is best studied in animal models such as marsupials that have evolved a different lactation strategy to eutherians and allow researchers to more easily identify regulatory mechanisms that are not as readily apparent in eutherian species. For example, the tammar wallaby (Macropus eugenii) has evolved with a unique reproductive strategy of a short gestation, birth of an altricial young and a relatively long lactation during which the mother progressively changes the composition of the major, and many of the minor components of milk. Consequently, in contrast to eutherians, there is a far greater investment in development of the young during lactation and it is likely that many of the signals that regulate development of eutherian embryos in utero are delivered by the milk. This requires the co-ordinated development and function of the mammary gland since inappropriate timing of these signalling events may result in either limited or abnormal development of the young, and potentially a higher incidence of mature onset disease. Milk proteins play a significant role in these processes by providing timely presentation of signalling molecules and antibacterial protection for the young and the mammary gland at times when there is increased susceptibility to infection. This review describes studies exploiting the unique reproductive strategy of the tammar wallaby to investigate the role of several proteins secreted at specific times during the lactation cycle and that are correlated with potential roles in the young and mammary gland. Interestingly, alternative splicing of some milk protein genes has been utilised by the mammary gland to deliver domain-specific functions at specific times during lactation.  相似文献   

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14.
Recently dynein light chain 1 (DLC1), a cytoskeleton signaling component, has been shown to interact with and transactivate estrogen receptor-alpha (ER), leading to increased expression of ER target genes and growth stimulation of breast cancer cells. However, the molecular mechanism by which DLC1 regulates the ER pathway remains poorly understood. To gain insights into the putative mechanism, here we set out to identify novel DLC1-interacting proteins. We identified KIBRA, a WW domain- and a glutamic acid stretch-containing protein, as a DLC1-binding protein and showed that it interacts with DLC1 both in vitro and in vivo. We found that KIBRA-DLC1 complex is recruited to ER-responsive promoters. We also found that KIBRA-DLC1 interaction is mandatory for the recruitment and transactivation functions of ER or DLC1 to the target chromatin. Finally we found that KIBRA interacts with histone H3 via its glutamic acid-rich region and that such interaction might play a mechanistic role in conferring an optimal ER transactivation function as well as the proliferation of ligand-stimulated breast cancer cells. Together these findings indicate that DLC1-KIBRA interaction is essential for ER transactivation in breast cancer cells.  相似文献   

15.
Detailed analysis of protein tyrosine phosphatase (PTP) expression in mouse mammary gland and mammary epithelial cells using a set of degenerate primers corresponding to the PTP core domain sequence revealed the presence of 16 different receptor-type and intracellular PTPs. Northern blot and RT-PCR analyses revealed that some PTPs were up-regulated during gestation, suggesting that these enzymes are involved in development of mammary gland. However, expression of most PTPs dramatically decreased during lactation, whereas the beta-casein gene expression was increased and remained at a high level. At the involution stage after weaning, most PTPs were up-regulated and their expression returned almost to the virgin level. Such up-regulation was also induced by forced weaning in lactating mother mice. These results suggest the possible contribution of PTPs to the development, involution, and remodeling of mammary gland and their possible inhibitory action on maintaining high expression of milk genes during lactation.  相似文献   

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18.
High levels of the S100 calcium binding protein S100A4 also called fibroblast specific protein 1 (FSP1) have been established as an inducer of metastasis and indicator of poor prognosis in breast cancer. The mechanism by which S100A4 leads to increased cancer aggressiveness has yet to be established; moreover, the function of this protein in normal mammary gland biology has not been investigated. To address the role of S100A4 in normal mammary gland, its spatial and temporal expression patterns and possible function in branching morphogenesis were investigated. We show that the protein is expressed mainly in cells of the stromal compartment of adult humans, and during active ductal development, in pregnancy and in involution of mouse mammary gland. In 3D culture models, topical addition of S100A4 induced a significant increase in the TGFα mediated branching phenotype and a concomitant increase in expression of a previously identified branching morphogen, metalloproteinase-3 (MMP-3). These events were found to be dependent on MEK activation. Downregulation of S100A4 using shRNA significantly reduced TGFα induced branching and altered E-cadherin localization. These findings provide evidence that S100A4 is developmentally regulated and that it plays a functional role in mammary gland development, in concert with TGFα by activating MMP-3, and increasing invasion into the fat pad during branching. We suggest that S100A4-mediated effects during branching morphogenesis provide a plausible mechanism for how it may function in breast cancer progression.  相似文献   

19.
The Hippo pathway controls organ size and tumorigenesis by inhibiting cell proliferation and promoting apoptosis. KIBRA was recently identified as a novel regulator of the Hippo pathway. Several of the components of the Hippo pathway are important regulators of mitosis-related cell cycle events. We recently reported that KIBRA is phosphorylated by the mitotic kinases Aurora-A and -B. However, the role KIBRA plays in mitosis has not been established. Here, we show that KIBRA activates the Aurora kinases and is required for full activation of Aurora kinases during mitosis. KIBRA also promotes the phosphorylation of large tumor suppressor 2 (Lats2) on Ser83 by activating Aurora-A, which controls Lats2 centrosome localization. However, Aurora-A is not required for KIBRA to associate with Lats2. We also found that Lats2 inhibits the Aurora-mediated phosphorylation of KIBRA on Ser539, probably via regulating protein phosphatase 1. Consistent with playing a role in mitosis, siRNA-mediated knockdown of KIBRA causes mitotic abnormalities, including defects of spindle and centrosome formation and chromosome misalignment. We propose that the KIBRA-Aurora-Lats2 protein complexes form a novel axis that regulates precise mitosis.  相似文献   

20.
The steroid hormones 17 beta-estradiol and progesterone play a central role in the pathogenesis of breast cancer and regulate key phases of mammary gland development. This suggests that developmental regulatory molecules whose activity is influenced by ovarian hormones may also contribute to mammary carcinogenesis. In a screen designed to identify protein kinases expressed in the mammary gland, we previously identified a novel SNF1-related serine/threonine kinase, Hunk (hormonally upregulated Neu-associated kinase). During postnatal mammary development, Hunk mRNA expression is restricted to a subset of mammary epithelial cells and is temporally regulated with highest levels of expression occurring during early pregnancy. In addition, treatment of mice with 17 beta-estradiol and progesterone results in the rapid and synergistic upregulation of Hunk expression in a subset of mammary epithelial cells, suggesting that the expression of this kinase may be regulated by ovarian hormones. Consistent with the tightly regulated pattern of Hunk expression during pregnancy, mammary glands from transgenic mice engineered to misexpress Hunk in the mammary epithelium manifest temporally distinct defects in epithelial proliferation and differentiation during pregnancy, and fail to undergo normal lobuloalveolar development. Together, these observations suggest that Hunk may contribute to changes in the mammary gland that occur during pregnancy in response to ovarian hormones.  相似文献   

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