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"Mammary Glands, Animal - growth "
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Developing ovine mammary terminal duct lobular units have a dynamic mucosal and stromal immune microenvironment
2021
The human breast and ovine mammary gland undergo striking levels of postnatal development, leading to formation of terminal duct lobular units (TDLUs). Here we interrogate aspects of sheep TDLU growth as a model of breast development and to increase understanding of ovine mammogenesis. The distributions of epithelial nuclear Ki67 positivity differ significantly between younger and older lambs. Ki67 expression is polarised to the leading edge of the developing TDLUs. Intraepithelial ductal macrophages exhibit periodicity and considerably increased density in lambs approaching puberty. Stromal macrophages are more abundant centrally than peripherally. Intraepithelial T lymphocytes are more numerous in older lambs. Stromal hotspots of Ki67 expression colocalize with immune cell aggregates that exhibit distinct organisation consistent with tertiary lymphoid structures. The lamb mammary gland thus exhibits a dynamic mucosal and stromal immune microenvironment and constitutes a valuable model system that provides new insights into postnatal breast development.Nagy et al. describe the histomorphogenesis of ovine mammary development in pre- and peri-pubertal sheep as a candidate model for human breast development. They investigate the locale and abundance of several immune cell types at different ages, highlighting this as a valuable model system that can provide new insights into postnatal breast development.
Journal Article
Epithelial-Mesenchymal Transition in Cancer: Parallels Between Normal Development and Tumor Progression
2010
From the earliest stages of embryonic development, cells of epithelial and mesenchymal origin contribute to the structure and function of developing organs. However, these phenotypes are not always permanent, and instead, under the appropriate conditions, epithelial and mesenchymal cells convert between these two phenotypes. These processes, termed Epithelial-Mesenchymal Transition (EMT), or the reverse Mesenchymal-Epithelial Transition (MET), are required for complex body patterning and morphogenesis. In addition, epithelial plasticity and the acquisition of invasive properties without the full commitment to a mesenchymal phenotype are critical in development, particularly during branching morphogenesis in the mammary gland. Recent work in cancer has identified an analogous plasticity of cellular phenotypes whereby epithelial cancer cells acquire mesenchymal features that permit escape from the primary tumor. Because local invasion is thought to be a necessary first step in metastatic dissemination, EMT and epithelial plasticity are hypothesized to contribute to tumor progression. Similarities between developmental and oncogenic EMT have led to the identification of common contributing pathways, suggesting that the reactivation of developmental pathways in breast and other cancers contributes to tumor progression. For example, developmental EMT regulators including Snail/Slug, Twist, Six1, and Cripto, along with developmental signaling pathways including TGF-β and Wnt/β-catenin, are misexpressed in breast cancer and correlate with poor clinical outcomes. This review focuses on the parallels between epithelial plasticity/EMT in the mammary gland and other organs during development, and on a selection of developmental EMT regulators that are misexpressed specifically during breast cancer.
Journal Article
Distinct stem cells contribute to mammary gland development and maintenance
by
Dekoninck, Sophie
,
Bouvencourt, Gaëlle
,
Blanpain, Cédric
in
631/136/2060
,
631/443
,
631/532/2436
2011
The mammary epithelium is composed of several cell lineages including luminal, alveolar and myoepithelial cells. Transplantation studies have suggested that the mammary epithelium is maintained by the presence of multipotent mammary stem cells. To define the cellular hierarchy of the mammary gland during physiological conditions, we performed genetic lineage-tracing experiments and clonal analysis of the mouse mammary gland during development, adulthood and pregnancy. We found that in postnatal unperturbed mammary gland, both luminal and myoepithelial lineages contain long-lived unipotent stem cells that display extensive renewing capacities, as demonstrated by their ability to clonally expand during morphogenesis and adult life as well as undergo massive expansion during several cycles of pregnancy. The demonstration that the mammary gland contains different types of long-lived stem cells has profound implications for our understanding of mammary gland physiology and will be instrumental in unravelling the cells at the origin of breast cancers.
Mammary stem cells
Using lineage-tracing approaches in mice, Cédric Blanpain and colleagues decipher the cellular hierarchy of the mammary epithelium during development, homeostasis and lactation. They find that the various cell lineages of mammary epithelium originate from and are maintained by different classes of unipotent stem cells rather than by multipotent stem cells, as was previously thought. As well as having implications for our understanding of mammary gland physiology, this finding is of relevance to attempts to identify the cells at the origin of breast cancers.
Journal Article
Notch ligand Dll1 mediates cross-talk between mammary stem cells and the macrophageal niche
2018
Macrophages engulf damaged and dead cells to clear infection, but they also participate in tissue regeneration. Chakrabarti
et al.
expand the macrophage repertoire for mammary gland development (see the Perspective by Kannan and Eaves). Mammary gland stem cells secrete the Notch ligand Dll1 and activate Notch signaling, which promotes survival of adjacent macrophages. This stimulates production of Wnt ligands, which signal back to the mammary gland stem cells. This cross-talk plays an important role in coordinating mammary gland development, tissue homeostasis, and, not least, breast cancer.
Science
, this issue p.
eaan4153
; see also p.
1401
Cross-talk between mammary stem cells and macrophages involves Notch and Wnt to regulate mammary development and function.
The stem cell niche is a specialized environment that dictates stem cell function during development and homeostasis. We show that Dll1, a Notch pathway ligand, is enriched in mammary gland stem cells (MaSCs) and mediates critical interactions with stromal macrophages in the surrounding niche in mouse models. Conditional deletion of Dll1 reduced the number of MaSCs and impaired ductal morphogenesis in the mammary gland. Moreover, MaSC-expressed Dll1 activates Notch signaling in stromal macrophages, increasing their expression of Wnt family ligands such as Wnt3, Wnt10A, and Wnt16, thereby initiating a feedback loop that promotes the function of Dll1-expressing MaSCs. Together, these findings reveal functionally important cross-talk between MaSCs and their macrophageal niche through Dll1-mediated Notch signaling.
Journal Article
Construction of developmental lineage relationships in the mouse mammary gland by single-cell RNA profiling
2017
The mammary epithelium comprises two primary cellular lineages, but the degree of heterogeneity within these compartments and their lineage relationships during development remain an open question. Here we report single-cell RNA profiling of mouse mammary epithelial cells spanning four developmental stages in the post-natal gland. Notably, the epithelium undergoes a large-scale shift in gene expression from a relatively homogeneous basal-like program in pre-puberty to distinct lineage-restricted programs in puberty. Interrogation of single-cell transcriptomes reveals different levels of diversity within the luminal and basal compartments, and identifies an early progenitor subset marked by CD55. Moreover, we uncover a luminal transit population and a rare mixed-lineage cluster amongst basal cells in the adult mammary gland. Together these findings point to a developmental hierarchy in which a basal-like gene expression program prevails in the early post-natal gland prior to the specification of distinct lineage signatures, and the presence of cellular intermediates that may serve as transit or lineage-primed cells.
The mammary epithelium comprises two cell lineages but the heterogeneity amongst these during development is unclear. Here, the authors report single-cell RNA sequencing of the mouse mammary epithelium at four developmental stages, revealing diversity in both compartments and a transcriptional shift with puberty onset.
Journal Article
Attenuated TGFB signalling in macrophages decreases susceptibility to DMBA-induced mammary cancer in mice
by
Woolford, Lucy
,
Evdokiou, Andreas
,
Sun, Xuan
in
9,10-Dimethyl-1,2-benzanthracene
,
9,10-Dimethyl-1,2-benzanthracene - adverse effects
,
Alveoli
2021
Background
Transforming growth factor beta1 (TGFB1) is a multi-functional cytokine that regulates mammary gland development and cancer progression through endocrine, paracrine and autocrine mechanisms. TGFB1 also plays roles in tumour development and progression, and its increased expression is associated with an increased breast cancer risk. Macrophages are key target cells for TGFB1 action, also playing crucial roles in tumourigenesis. However, the precise role of TGFB-regulated macrophages in the mammary gland is unclear. This study investigated the effect of attenuated TGFB signalling in macrophages on mammary gland development and mammary cancer susceptibility in mice.
Methods
A transgenic mouse model was generated, wherein a dominant negative TGFB receptor is activated in macrophages, in turn attenuating the TGFB signalling pathway specifically in the macrophage population. The mammary glands were assessed for morphological changes through wholemount and H&E analysis, and the abundance and phenotype of macrophages were analysed through immunohistochemistry. Another cohort of mice received carcinogen 7,12-dimethylbenz(a)anthracene (DMBA), and tumour development was monitored weekly. Human non-neoplastic breast tissue was also immunohistochemically assessed for latent TGFB1 and macrophage marker CD68.
Results
Attenuation of TGFB signalling resulted in an increase in the percentage of alveolar epithelium in the mammary gland at dioestrus and an increase in macrophage abundance. The phenotype of macrophages was also altered, with inflammatory macrophage markers iNOS and CCR7 increased by 110% and 40%, respectively. A significant decrease in DMBA-induced mammary tumour incidence and prolonged tumour-free survival in mice with attenuated TGFB signalling were observed. In human non-neoplastic breast tissue, there was a significant inverse relationship between latent TGFB1 protein and CD68-positive macrophages.
Conclusions
TGFB acts on macrophage populations in the mammary gland to reduce their abundance and dampen the inflammatory phenotype. TGFB signalling in macrophages increases mammary cancer susceptibility potentially through suppression of immune surveillance activities of macrophages.
Journal Article
Immune Cell Contribution to Mammary Gland Development
2024
Postpartum breast cancer (PPBC) is a unique subset of breast cancer, accounting for nearly half of the women diagnosed during their postpartum years. Mammary gland involution is widely regarded as being a key orchestrator in the initiation and progression of PPBC due to its unique wound-healing inflammatory signature. Here, we provide dialogue suggestive that lactation may also facilitate neoplastic development as a result of sterile inflammation. Immune cells are involved in all stages of postnatal mammary development. It has been proposed that the functions of these immune cells are partially directed by mammary epithelial cells (MECs) and the cytokines they produce. This suggests that a more niche area of exploration aimed at assessing activation of innate immune pathways within MECs could provide insight into immune cell contributions to the developing mammary gland. Immune cell contribution to pubertal development and mammary gland involution has been extensively studied; however, investigations into pregnancy and lactation remain limited. During pregnancy, the mammary gland undergoes dramatic expansion to prepare for lactation. As a result, MECs are susceptible to replicative stress. During lactation, mitochondria are pushed to capacity to fulfill the high energetic demands of producing milk. This replicative and metabolic stress, if unresolved, can elicit activation of innate immune pathways within differentiating MECs. In this review, we broadly discuss postnatal mammary development and current knowledge of immune cell contribution to each developmental stage, while also emphasizing a more unique area of study that will be beneficial in the discovery of novel therapeutic biomarkers of PPBC.
Journal Article
Stromal Gli2 activity coordinates a niche signaling program for mammary epithelial stem cells
2017
The stem cell niche is a complex local signaling microenvironment that regulates stem cell activity for tissue and organ maintenance and regeneration. As well as responding locally, during puberty, the mammary gland stem cell niche also responds to systemic hormonal signals. Zhao
et al.
have found that Gli2, a transcriptional effector of Hedgehog signaling, coordinates the niche-signaling program and activates expression of receptors for the mammatrophic hormones estrogen and growth hormone throughout the mammary gland (see the Perspective by Robertson). Disease may result not only from stem cell defects, but also from dysregulation of the microenvironment.
Science
, this issue p.
eaal3485
; see also p.
250
The GLI2 transcription factor regulates stromal cell expression of signals controlling breast epithelial stem cell activity.
The stem cell niche is a complex local signaling microenvironment that sustains stem cell activity during organ maintenanceorgan maintenance and regeneration. The mammary gland niche must support its associated stem cells while also responding to systemic hormonal regulation that triggers pubertal changes. We find that
Gli2
, the major Hedgehog pathway transcriptional effector, acts within mouse mammary stromal cells to direct a hormone-responsive niche signaling program by activating expression of factors that regulate epithelial stem cells as well as receptors for the mammatrophic hormones estrogen and growth hormone. Whereas prior studies implicate stem cell defects in human disease, this work shows that niche dysfunction may also cause disease, with possible relevance for human disorders and in particular the breast growth pathogenesis associated with combined pituitary hormone deficiency.
Journal Article
Developmental Regulation of circRNAs in Normal and Diseased Mammary Gland: A Focus on circRNA-miRNA Networks
by
Talhouk, Rabih
,
Maatouk, Nour
,
AbouHaidar, Mounir
in
Animals
,
Breast Neoplasms - genetics
,
Breast Neoplasms - pathology
2025
Circular RNAs (circRNAs) have emerged as critical regulators in various biological processes including diseases. In the mammary gland (MG), which undergoes most of its development postnatally, circRNAs play pivotal roles in both physiological and pathological contexts. This review highlights the involvement of circRNAs during key developmental stages of the MG, with particular emphasis on lactation, where circRNA-miRNA networks significantly influence milk secretion and composition. CircRNAs exhibit stage-, breed- and species-specific expression patterns during lactation, which underscores their complexity. This intricate regulation also plays a significant role in pathological conditions of the MG, where dysregulated circRNA expression contributes to disease progression such as mastitis, early breast cancer (BC) stages, and epithelial-to-mesenchymal transition in BC (EMT). In mastitis, altered circRNA expression disrupts immune responses and compromises epithelial integrity. During early BC progression, circRNAs drive cell proliferation, while in EMT, they facilitate metastatic processes. By focusing on the circRNA-miRNA interactions underlying these processes, this review highlights their potential use as biomarkers for MG development, disease progression, and as therapeutic targets.
Journal Article
Characterizing serotonin expression throughout bovine mammary gland developmental stages and its relationship with 17β-estradiol at puberty
by
Hernandez, Laura L.
,
Field, Sena L.
,
Arendt, Lisa M.
in
17β-Estradiol
,
5-Hydroxytryptophan - pharmacology
,
Animals
2025
Serotonin acts in an autocrine/paracrine manner within the mammary epithelium regulating cell homeostasis during lactation and cell turnover during involution after milk stasis. However, the presence and role of mammary serotonin during the pubertal developmental stage is unknown in the bovine. Here, we characterized the serotonin receptor profile and serotonin immunolocalization in bovine mammary tissue at eight developmental stages (i.e., birth, weaning, puberty, six months gestation, early lactation, mid-lactation, early dry and late dry, n = 6/stage). Further, we investigated the effects of 5-HTP (serotonin precursor), 17β-estradiol (E 2 ), and ICI 182780 (ERα antagonist) either alone or in various combinations (i.e., 5-HTP + E 2 , 5-HTP + ICI, E 2 + ICI or 5-HTP + E 2 + ICI) on cultured bovine mammary epithelial cells (MAC-T). Serotonin receptor gene expression is highly dynamic throughout mammary development, particularly highly expressed in the puberty stage expressing 12 out of the 13 serotonin receptors evaluated ( 5-HTR1A , -1B , -1D , -1F , -2A, -2B, -2C, -3B, -4, -5a, -6, and -7 ), relative to the birth stage. Following a 24-hour incubation, all treatments except ICI increased MAC-T cell proliferation. Incubation with 5-HTP + ICI resulted in a downregulation of ESR1 , ESR2 , GPER1 and AREG, relative to CON. Incubation with 5-HTP and E 2 alone downregulated the expression of TPH1 , 5-HTR1A and 5-HTR1B , relative to CON. Overall, our data indicates serotonin is present in the juvenile developing mammary tissue and the expression of various receptors is observed suggesting an active involvement at this early stage. Additionally, serotonin might indirectly regulate mammary epithelial cell proliferation alone and concurrently with E 2 during puberty through the modulation of E 2 signaling genes and 5-HTR1A and -1B .
Journal Article