Constitutive activation of smoothened (SMO) in mammary glands of transgenic mice leads to increased proliferation, altered differentiation and ductal dysplasia
Author:
Moraes Ricardo C.1, Zhang Xiaomei1, Harrington Nikesha1, Fung Jennifer Y.1, Wu Meng-Fen1, Hilsenbeck Susan G.1, Allred D. Craig1, Lewis Michael T.1
Affiliation:
1. Baylor Breast Center and Department of Molecular and Cellular Biology,Room N1210; MS:BCM600, Baylor College of Medicine, One Baylor Plaza, Houston,TX 77030, USA.
Abstract
The hedgehog signaling network regulates pattern formation, proliferation,cell fate and stem/progenitor cell self-renewal in many organs. Altered hedgehog signaling is implicated in 20-25% of all cancers, including breast cancer. We demonstrated previously that heterozygous disruption of the gene encoding the patched-1 (PTCH1) hedgehog receptor, a negative regulator of smoothened (Smo) in the absence of ligand, led to mammary ductal dysplasia in virgin mice. We now show that expression of activated human SMO(SmoM2) under the mouse mammary tumor virus (MMTV) promoter in transgenic mice leads to increased proliferation, altered differentiation, and ductal dysplasias distinct from those caused by Ptch1 heterozygosity. SMO activation also increased the mammosphere-forming efficiency of primary mammary epithelial cells. However, limiting-dilution transplantation showed a decrease in the frequency of regenerative stem cells in MMTV-SmoM2epithelium relative to wild type, suggesting enhanced mammosphere-forming efficiency was due to increased survival or activity of division-competent cell types under anchorage-independent growth conditions, rather than an increase in the proportion of regenerative stem cells per se. In human clinical samples, altered hedgehog signaling occurs early in breast cancer development, with PTCH1 expression reduced in ∼50% of ductal carcinoma in situ (DCIS) and invasive breast cancers (IBC). Conversely, SMO is ectopically expressed in 70% of DCIS and 30% of IBC. Surprisingly, in both human tumors and MMTV-SmoM2 mice, SMO rarely colocalized with the Ki67 proliferation marker. Our data suggest that altered hedgehog signaling may contribute to breast cancer development by stimulating proliferation, and by increasing the pool of division-competent cells capable of anchorage-independent growth.
Publisher
The Company of Biologists
Subject
Developmental Biology,Molecular Biology
Reference48 articles.
1. Allred, D. C., Harvey, J. M., Berardo, M. and Clark, G. M.(1998). Prognostic and predictive factors in breast cancer by immunohistochemical analysis. Mod. Pathol.11,155-168. 2. Bonnefoix, T., Bonnefoix, P., Verdiel, P. and Sotto, J. J.(1996). Fitting limiting dilution experiments with generalized linear models results in a test of the single-hit Poisson assumption. J. Immunol. Methods194,113-119. 3. Briscoe, J. and Therond, P. (2005). Hedgehog signaling: from the Drosophila cuticle to anti-cancer drugs. Dev. Cell8,143-151. 4. Brisken, C., Park, S., Vass, T., Lydon, J. P., O'Malley, B. W. and Weinberg, R. A. (1998). A paracrine role for the epithelial progesterone receptor in mammary gland development. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA95,5076-5081. 5. Chang-Claude, J., Dunning, A., Schnitzbauer, U., Galmbacher, P.,Tee, L., Wjst, M., Chalmers, J., Zemzoum, I., Harbeck, N., Pharoah, P. D. et al. (2003). The patched polymorphism Pro1315Leu (C3944T) may modulate the association between use of oral contraceptives and breast cancer risk. Int. J. Cancer103,779-783.
Cited by
150 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献
|
|