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Publication : A role for the cytoskeleton in prolactin-dependent mammary epithelial cell differentiation.

First Author  Zoubiane GS Year  2004
Journal  J Cell Sci Volume  117
Issue  Pt 2 Pages  271-80
PubMed ID  14676278 Mgi Jnum  J:87904
Mgi Id  MGI:3028453 Doi  10.1242/jcs.00855
Citation  Zoubiane GS, et al. (2004) A role for the cytoskeleton in prolactin-dependent mammary epithelial cell differentiation. J Cell Sci 117(Pt 2):271-80
abstractText  The function of exocrine glands depends on signals within the extracellular environment. In the mammary gland, integrin-mediated adhesion to the extracellular matrix protein laminin co-operates with soluble factors such as prolactin to regulate tissue-specific gene expression. The mechanism of matrix and prolactin crosstalk and the activation of downstream signals are not fully understood. Because integrins organize the cytoskeleton, we analysed the contribution of the cytoskeleton to prolactin receptor activation and the resultant stimulation of milk protein gene expression. We show that the proximal signalling events initiated by prolactin (i.e. tyrosine phosphorylation of receptor and the associated kinase Jak2) do not depend on an intact actin cytoskeleton. However, actin networks and microtubules are both necessary for continued mammary cell differentiation, because cytoskeletal integrity is required to transduce the signals between prolactin receptor and Stat5, a transcription factor necessary for milk protein gene transcription. The two different cytoskeletal scaffolds regulate prolactin signalling through separate mechanisms that are specific to cellular differentiation but do not affect the general profile of protein synthesis.
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