Abstract

Involution of the mammary gland is a complex process of controlled apoptosis and tissue remodelling. The aim of the project was to identify genes that are specifically involved in this process. We used Affymetrix oligonucleotide microarrays to perform a detailed transcript analysis on the mechanism of controlled involution after withdrawal of the pups at day seven of lactation. Some of the results were confirmed by semi-quantitative reverse transcriptase polymerase chain reaction, Western blotting or immunohistochemistry. We identified 145 genes that were specifically upregulated during the first 4 days of involution; of these, 49 encoded immunoglobulin genes. A further 12 genes, including those encoding the signal transducer and activator of transcription 3 (STAT3), the lipopolysaccharide receptor (CD14) and lipopolysaccharide-binding protein (LBP), were involved in the acute-phase response, demonstrating that the expression of acute-phase response genes can occur in the mammary gland itself and not only in the liver. Expression of LBP and CD14 was upregulated, at both the RNA and protein level, immediately after pup withdrawal; CD14 was strongly expressed in the luminal epithelial cells. Other genes identified suggested neutrophil activation early in involution, followed by macrophage activation late in the process. Immunohistochemistry and histological staining confirmed the infiltration of the involuting mammary tissue with neutrophils, plasma cells, macrophages and eosinophils. Oligonucleotide microarrays are a useful tool for identifying genes that are involved in the complex developmental process of mammary gland involution. The genes identified are consistent with an immune cascade, with an early acute-phase response that occurs in the mammary gland itself and resembles a wound healing process.

Highlights

  • Involution of the mammary gland is a complex process of controlled apoptosis and tissue remodelling

  • Using F4/80 antibody for immunohistochemistry (IHC) in addition to eosin staining, we showed that infiltration of the mouse mammary tissue by macrophages paralleled the increase of the identified transcripts during involution, and that it was preceded by an activation and R76 increase in the number of neutrophils

  • We showed that the acute-phase response (APR) protein lipopolysaccharide (LPS)-binding protein (LBP) is not expressed in the liver but in the involuting gland itself, and that CD14 is strongly expressed in the luminal epithelial cells during involution

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Summary

Introduction

Involution of the mammary gland is a complex process of controlled apoptosis and tissue remodelling. The mouse mammary gland is an excellent model system with which to study both the regulation of development and the functional differentiation of an organ. Most of the development occurs postnatally, when the gland undergoes a highly regulated cascade of invasive growth, branching, differentiation, secretion, apoptosis and remodelling during each pregnancy cycle [1,2]. Apoptosis of the alveolar cells commences within hours of forced weaning, when milk accumulates within the alveolar lumen and the levels of lactogenic hormones decrease. Irreversible phase of involution, which is regulated by systemic hormones, the lobuloalveolar architecture is remodelled by proteinase degradation of the basement membrane and the extracellular matrix. Within 2 weeks the gland has returned to a morphological state similar to that of an adult virgin mouse

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