Abstract
Estrogens enhance proliferation of normal mouse mammary cells in vivo. However, when cultured alone, normal mouse mammary epithelial cells fail to exhibit a proliferative response to estrogen in vitro; the basis for this lack of in vitro responsiveness to estrogen is not known. The purpose of the present study is to determine if cultured normal mouse mammary cells possess estrogen receptors (ER) and/or progesterone receptors (PgR) and if the ER mechanism is functional, as measured by the ability of estrogens to regulate PgR. Recent findings that mammary fibroblasts can influence the behavior of mammary epithelial cells in vitro led us to investigate their effect on epithelial cell responsiveness to estrogen. In these studies, collagenase-dissociated mammary glands of midpregnant BALB/c mice were the source of mixed cultures (containing both epithelial cells and fibroblasts) and epithelial or fibroblast cultures. The purity of epithelial or fibroblast cultures was quantified immunocytochemically using antivimentin antibody as a fibroblast marker. Steroid hormone binding was quantified in intact cultured cells using [3H]R5020 and 17 beta-[3H]estradiol as the ligands. Specific high affinity binding sites for estrogen (Kd = 3.1 +/- 0.8 X 10(-10] and progestins (Kd = 3.3 +/- 1.2 X 10(-9) M) were detected in mixed cultures. To assess the possible role of mammary fibroblasts, we investigated cultures containing only fibroblasts which were derived by differential centrifugation. When 17 beta-estradiol was added to the culture medium, a significant (P less than 0.01) increase in PgR concentration was observed in mixed cultures. While mixed cultures maintain responsiveness to estrogen in vitro, as measured herein, the epithelial cultures, derived by differential centrifugation and Percoll gradient sedimentation, did not. However, estrogenic regulation of PgR appears to be specific to epithelial cells in mixed cultures, since fibroblast cultures neither contained PgR nor displayed estrogen-inducible PgR. The lack of responsiveness of epithelial cultures is not due to a loss or decrease in the ER concentration. Thus, the presence of mammary fibroblasts appears to be associated with epithelial cell responsiveness to estrogen in vitro.
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