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Publication : The transcription factor Sox10 is an essential determinant of branching morphogenesis and involution in the mouse mammary gland.

First Author  Mertelmeyer S Year  2020
Journal  Sci Rep Volume  10
Issue  1 Pages  17807
PubMed ID  33082503 Mgi Jnum  J:298989
Mgi Id  MGI:6472287 Doi  10.1038/s41598-020-74664-y
Citation  Mertelmeyer S, et al. (2020) The transcription factor Sox10 is an essential determinant of branching morphogenesis and involution in the mouse mammary gland. Sci Rep 10(1):17807
abstractText  The high mobility group-domain containing transcription factor Sox10 is an essential regulator of developmental processes and homeostasis in the neural crest, several neural crest-derived lineages and myelinating glia. Recent studies have also implicated Sox10 as an important factor in mammary stem and precursor cells. Here we employ a series of mouse mutants with constitutive and conditional Sox10 deficiencies to show that Sox10 has multiple functions in the developing mammary gland. While there is no indication for a requirement of Sox10 in the specification of the mammary placode or descending mammary bud, it is essential for both the prenatal hormone-independent as well as the pubertal hormone-dependent branching of the mammary epithelium and for proper alveologenesis during pregnancy. It furthermore acts in a dosage-dependent manner. Sox10 also plays a role during the involution process at the end of the lactation period. Whereas its effect on epithelial branching and alveologenesis are likely causally related to its function in mammary stem and precursor cells, this is not the case for its function during involution where Sox10 seems to work at least in part through regulation of the miR-424(322)/503 cluster.
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