Serotonin regulates mammary gland development via an autocrine-paracrine loop |
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Authors: | Matsuda Manabu Imaoka Tatsuhiko Vomachka Archie J Gudelsky Gary A Hou Zhaoyuan Mistry Meenakshi Bailey Jason P Nieport Kathryn M Walther Diego J Bader Michael Horseman Nelson D |
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Affiliation: | Department of Molecular and Cellular Physiology, University of Cincinnati, Cincinnati, OH 45221, USA. |
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Abstract: | Mammary gland development is controlled by a dynamic interplay between endocrine hormones and locally produced factors. Biogenic monoamines (serotonin, dopamine, norepinephrine, and others) are an important class of bioregulatory molecules that have not been shown to participate in mammary development. Here we show that mammary glands stimulated by prolactin (PRL) express genes essential for serotonin biosynthesis (tryptophan hydroxylase [TPH] and aromatic amine decarboxylase). TPH mRNA was elevated during pregnancy and lactation, and serotonin was detected in the mammary epithelium and in milk. TPH was induced by PRL in mammosphere cultures and by milk stasis in nursing dams, suggesting that the gene is controlled by milk filling in the alveoli. Serotonin suppressed beta-casein gene expression and caused shrinkage of mammary alveoli. Conversely, TPH1 gene disruption or antiserotonergic drugs resulted in enhanced secretory features and alveolar dilation. Thus, autocrine-paracrine serotonin signaling is an important regulator of mammary homeostasis and early involution. |
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