|  Help  |  About  |  Contact Us

Publication : Prolactin promotes mammary pathogenesis independently from cyclin D1.

First Author  Asher JM Year  2012
Journal  Am J Pathol Volume  181
Issue  1 Pages  294-302
PubMed ID  22658484 Mgi Jnum  J:185515
Mgi Id  MGI:5429101 Doi  10.1016/j.ajpath.2012.03.041
Citation  Asher JM, et al. (2012) Prolactin promotes mammary pathogenesis independently from cyclin d1. Am J Pathol 181(1):294-302
abstractText  Epidemiological and experimental studies have revealed an important role for prolactin (PRL) in breast cancer. Cyclin D1 is a major downstream target of PRL in lobuloalveolar development during pregnancy and is amplified and/or overexpressed in many breast carcinomas. To examine the importance of cyclin D1 in PRL-induced pathogenesis, we generated transgenic mice (NRL-PRL) that overexpress PRL in mammary epithelial cells, with wild-type, heterozygous, or genetically ablated cyclin D1 in the FVB/N genetic background. Although loss of one cyclin D1 allele did not affect PRL-induced mammary lesions in nonparous females, the complete absence of cyclin D1 (D1(-/-)) markedly decreased tumor incidence. Nevertheless, NRL-PRL/D1(-/-) females developed significantly more preneoplastic lesions (eg, epithelial hyperplasias and mammary intraepithelial neoplasias) than D1(-/-) females. Moreover, although lack of cyclin D1 reduced proliferation of morphologically normal mammary epithelium, transgenic PRL restored it to rates of wild-type females. PRL posttranscriptionally increased nuclear cyclin D3 protein in D1(-/-) luminal cells, indicating one compensatory mechanism. Consistently, pregnancy induced extensive lobuloalveolar growth in the absence of cyclin D1. However, transcripts for milk proteins were reduced, and pups failed to survive, suggesting that mammary differentiation was inadequate. Together, these results indicate that cyclin D1 is an important, but not essential, mediator of PRL-induced mammary proliferation and pathology in FVB/N mice and is critical for differentiation and lactation.
Quick Links:
 
Quick Links:
 

Expression

Publication --> Expression annotations

 

Other

10 Bio Entities

Trail: Publication

0 Expression