Abstract

IntroductionEarly pregnancy has a strong protective effect against breast cancer in humans and rodents, but the underlying mechanism is unknown. Because breast cancers are thought to arise from specific cell subpopulations of mammary epithelia, we studied the effect of parity on the transcriptome and the differentiation/proliferation potential of specific luminal and basal mammary cells in mice.MethodsMammary epithelial cell subpopulations (luminal Sca1-, luminal Sca1+, basal stem/progenitor, and basal myoepithelial cells) were isolated by flow cytometry from parous and age-matched virgin mice and examined by using a combination of unbiased genomics, bioinformatics, in vitro colony formation, and in vivo limiting dilution transplantation assays. Specific findings were further investigated with immunohistochemistry in entire glands of parous and age-matched virgin mice.ResultsTranscriptome analysis revealed an upregulation of differentiation genes and a marked decrease in the Wnt/Notch signaling ratio in basal stem/progenitor cells of parous mice. Separate bioinformatics analyses showed reduced activity for the canonical Wnt transcription factor LEF1/TCF7 and increased activity for the Wnt repressor TCF3. This finding was specific for basal stem/progenitor cells and was associated with downregulation of potentially carcinogenic pathways and a reduction in the proliferation potential of this cell subpopulation in vitro and in vivo. As a possible mechanism for decreased Wnt signaling in basal stem/progenitor cells, we found a more than threefold reduction in the expression of the secreted Wnt ligand Wnt4 in total mammary cells from parous mice, which corresponded to a similar decrease in the proportion of Wnt4-secreting and estrogen/progesterone receptor-positive cells. Because recombinant Wnt4 rescued the proliferation defect of basal stem/progenitor cells in vitro, reduced Wnt4 secretion appears to be causally related to parity-induced alterations of basal stem/progenitor cell properties in mice.ConclusionsBy revealing that parity induces differentiation and downregulates the Wnt/Notch signaling ratio and the in vitro and in vivo proliferation potential of basal stem/progenitor cells in mice, our study sheds light on the long-term consequences of an early pregnancy. Furthermore, it opens the door to future studies assessing whether inhibitors of the Wnt pathway may be used to mimic the parity-induced protective effect against breast cancer.

Highlights

  • Pregnancy has a strong protective effect against breast cancer in humans and rodents, but the underlying mechanism is unknown

  • The fluorescence-activated cell sorting (FACS) profiles of epithelial cell subpopulations from parous mice and age-matched virgin control mice were similar (Figure 1C, D; Additional file 1) with the exception of luminal Sca1+ cells, which decreased by about 50% in parous mice (P = 0.02)

  • The parity-induced decrease in Wnt/Notch signaling ratio is specific for the basal stem/progenitor cell subpopulation To assess whether the observed decrease in canonical Wnt and increase in Notch signaling were specific for basal stem/progenitor cells, we investigated the enrichment of Wnt/Notch signaling genes over all genes altered in the various FACS-sorted mammary epithelial cell subpopulations from parous as compared with virgin control mice

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Summary

Introduction

Pregnancy has a strong protective effect against breast cancer in humans and rodents, but the underlying mechanism is unknown. An initial increase in risk occurs immediately after parturition in women older than 25 years, the overall lifetime risk of breast cancer decreases after pregnancy [1,2] This protective effect is > 50% if a full-term pregnancy has occurred before the age of 20 years [1]. Pregnancy and pregnancy-mimicking hormones have a strong protective effect against mammary tumors in rodents This is true both for carcinogen-induced mammary tumors [3] and for genetically engineered mouse models of breast cancer [4]. Given that breast cancers arise from specific subpopulations of mammary epithelial cells [11], investigations of early parity-induced gene-expression changes in distinct mammary epithelial cell subpopulations are warranted

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