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Publication : Physiological DNA damage promotes functional endoreplication of mammary gland alveolar cells during lactation.

First Author  Molinuevo R Year  2024
Journal  Nat Commun Volume  15
Issue  1 Pages  3288
PubMed ID  38627401 Mgi Jnum  J:349478
Mgi Id  MGI:7622768 Doi  10.1038/s41467-024-47668-9
Citation  Molinuevo R, et al. (2024) Physiological DNA damage promotes functional endoreplication of mammary gland alveolar cells during lactation. Nat Commun 15(1):3288
abstractText  Lactation insufficiency affects many women worldwide. During lactation, a large portion of mammary gland alveolar cells become polyploid, but how these cells balance the hyperproliferation occurring during normal alveologenesis with terminal differentiation required for lactation is unknown. Here, we show that DNA damage accumulates due to replication stress during pregnancy, activating the DNA damage response. Modulation of DNA damage levels in vivo by intraductal injections of nucleosides or DNA damaging agents reveals that the degree of DNA damage accumulated during pregnancy governs endoreplication and milk production. We identify a mechanism involving early mitotic arrest through CDK1 inactivation, resulting in a heterogeneous alveolar population with regards to ploidy and nuclei number. The inactivation of CDK1 is mediated by the DNA damage response kinase WEE1 with homozygous loss of Wee1 resulting in decreased endoreplication, alveologenesis and milk production. Thus, we propose that the DNA damage response to replication stress couples proliferation and endoreplication during mammary gland alveologenesis. Our study sheds light on mechanisms governing lactogenesis and identifies non-hormonal means for increasing milk production.
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