Mammary Epithelial Reconstitution with Gene-Modified Stem Cells Assigns Roles to Stat5 in Luminal Alveolar Cell Fate Decisions, Differentiation, Involution, and Mammary Tumor Formation
-
- Vida Vafaizadeh
- Georg Speyer Haus, Institute for Biomedical Research, Frankfurt am Main, Germany
-
- Petra Klemmt
- Georg Speyer Haus, Institute for Biomedical Research, Frankfurt am Main, Germany
-
- Christian Brendel
- Georg Speyer Haus, Institute for Biomedical Research, Frankfurt am Main, Germany
-
- Kristoffer Weber
- Research Department Cell and Gene Therapy, Clinic for Stem Cell Transplantation, UCCH, UMC Hamburg-Eppendorf, Hamburg, Germany
-
- Carmen Doebele
- Georg Speyer Haus, Institute for Biomedical Research, Frankfurt am Main, Germany
-
- Kara Britt
- Prostate and Breast Cancer Research Program, Monash University, Melbourne, Australia
-
- Manuel Grez
- Georg Speyer Haus, Institute for Biomedical Research, Frankfurt am Main, Germany
-
- Boris Fehse
- Research Department Cell and Gene Therapy, Clinic for Stem Cell Transplantation, UCCH, UMC Hamburg-Eppendorf, Hamburg, Germany
-
- Sylvane Desriviéres
- Institute of Psychiatry, SGDP Centre, King's College London, London, United Kingdom
-
- Bernd Groner
- Georg Speyer Haus, Institute for Biomedical Research, Frankfurt am Main, Germany
説明
<jats:title>Abstract</jats:title> <jats:p>The mammary gland represents a unique model system to study gene functions in adult stem cells. Mammary stem cells (MaSCs) can regenerate a functional epithelium on transplantation into cleared fat pads. We studied the consequences of distinct genetic modifications of MaSCs on their repopulation and differentiation ability. The reconstitution of ductal trees was used as a stem cell selection procedure and the nearly quantitative lentiviral infection efficiency of the primary mammary epithelial cells (MECs) rendered the enrichment of MaSCs before their transplantation unnecessary. The repopulation frequency of transduced MaSCs was nearly 100% in immunodeficient recipients and the resulting transgenic ducts homogeneously expressed the virally encoded fluorescent marker proteins. Transplantation of a mixture of MECs, expressing different fluorescent proteins, resulted in a distinct pattern of ductal outgrowths originating from a small number of individually transduced MaSCs. We used genetically modified MECs to define multiple functions of Stat5 during mammary gland development and differentiation. Stat5-downregulation in MaSCs did not affect primary ductal outgrowth, but impaired side branching and the emergence of mature alveolar cells from luminal progenitors during pregnancy. Conversely, the expression of a constitutively active variant of Stat5 (cS5-F) caused epithelial hyperproliferation, thickening of the ducts and precocious, functional alveoli formation in virgin mice. Expression of cS5-F also prevented involution and caused the formation of estrogen and progesterone receptor positive (ER+PR+) adenocarcinomas. The tumors expressed activated Stat5 and Stat3 and contained a small fraction of CD44+ cells, possibly indicative of cancer stem cells.</jats:p>
収録刊行物
-
- Stem Cells
-
Stem Cells 28 (5), 928-938, 2010-03-16
Oxford University Press (OUP)
- Tweet
詳細情報 詳細情報について
-
- CRID
- 1360861292563124736
-
- DOI
- 10.1002/stem.407
-
- ISSN
- 15494918
- 10665099
-
- データソース種別
-
- Crossref