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The mammary microenvironment alters the differentiation repertoire of neural stem cells
Authors:Booth Brian W  Mack David L  Androutsellis-Theotokis Andreas  McKay Ronald D G  Boulanger Corinne A  Smith Gilbert H
Affiliation:Mammary Biology and Tumorigenesis Laboratory, National Cancer Institute, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, MD 20892, USA.
Abstract:A fundamental issue in stem cell biology is whether adult somatic stem cells are capable of accessing alternate tissue sites and continue functioning as stem cells in the new microenvironment. To address this issue relative to neurogenic stem cells in the mouse mammary gland microenvironment, we mixed wild-type mammary epithelial cells (MECs) with bona fide neural stem cells (NSCs) isolated from WAP-Cre/Rosa26R mice and inoculated them into cleared fat pads of immunocompromised females. Hosts were bred 6–8 weeks later and examined postinvolution. This allowed for mammary tissue growth, transient activation of the WAP-Cre gene, recombination, and constitutive expression of LacZ. The NSCs and their progeny contributed to mammary epithelial growth during ductal morphogenesis, and the Rosa26-LacZ reporter gene was activated by WAP-Cre expression during pregnancy. Some NSC-derived LacZ+ cells expressed mammary-specific functions, including milk protein synthesis, whereas others adopted myoepithelial cell fates. Thus, NSCs and their progeny enter mammary epithelium–specific niches and adopt the function of similarly endowed mammary cells. This result supports the conclusion that tissue-specific signals emanating from the stroma and from the differentiated somatic cells of the mouse mammary gland can redirect the NSCs to produce cellular progeny committed to MEC fates.
Keywords:transplantation   niche   plasticity   trans-differentiation   regeneration
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