Mammary molecular portraits reveal lineage-specific features and progenitor cell vulnerabilities

Author:

Casey Alison E.1,Sinha Ankit1,Singhania Rajat1,Livingstone Julie2ORCID,Waterhouse Paul1ORCID,Tharmapalan Pirashaanthy1,Cruickshank Jennifer1,Shehata Mona1,Drysdale Erik2,Fang Hui1,Kim Hyeyeon1,Isserlin Ruth3,Bailey Swneke1,Medina Tiago1,Deblois Genevieve1,Shiah Yu-Jia2,Barsyte-Lovejoy Dalia4,Hofer Stefan1,Bader Gary3ORCID,Lupien Mathieu15,Arrowsmith Cheryl145,Knapp Stefan6,De Carvalho Daniel15,Berman Hal17,Boutros Paul C.258,Kislinger Thomas15ORCID,Khokha Rama15ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Princess Margaret Cancer Centre, Toronto, ON, Canada

2. Informatics and Biocomputing Program, Ontario Institute for Cancer Research, Toronto, ON, Canada

3. The Donnelly Centre, University of Toronto, Toronto, ON, Canada

4. Structural Genomics Consortium, University of Toronto, Toronto, ON, Canada

5. Department of Medical Biophysics, University of Toronto, Toronto, ON, Canada

6. Nuffield Department of Clinical Medicine, Structural Genomics Consortium, University of Oxford, Oxford, UK

7. Department of Laboratory Medicine and Pathobiology, University of Toronto, ON, Canada

8. Department of Pharmacology and Toxicology, University of Toronto, Toronto, ON, Canada

Abstract

The mammary epithelium depends on specific lineages and their stem and progenitor function to accommodate hormone-triggered physiological demands in the adult female. Perturbations of these lineages underpin breast cancer risk, yet our understanding of normal mammary cell composition is incomplete. Here, we build a multimodal resource for the adult gland through comprehensive profiling of primary cell epigenomes, transcriptomes, and proteomes. We define systems-level relationships between chromatin–DNA–RNA–protein states, identify lineage-specific DNA methylation of transcription factor binding sites, and pinpoint proteins underlying progesterone responsiveness. Comparative proteomics of estrogen and progesterone receptor–positive and –negative cell populations, extensive target validation, and drug testing lead to discovery of stem and progenitor cell vulnerabilities. Top epigenetic drugs exert cytostatic effects; prevent adult mammary cell expansion, clonogenicity, and mammopoiesis; and deplete stem cell frequency. Select drugs also abrogate human breast progenitor cell activity in normal and high-risk patient samples. This integrative computational and functional study provides fundamental insight into mammary lineage and stem cell biology.

Funder

Canadian Breast Cancer Foundation

Canadian Cancer Society Research Institute

Prairie Women on Snowmobiles

Hold’em For Life

CBCF

Canadian Institutes of Health Research

Frank Fletcher Memorial Fund

Terry Fox Research Institute

CIHR

Publisher

Rockefeller University Press

Subject

Cell Biology

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