Delineating the Epithelial Hierarchy in the Mouse Mammary Gland

  1. M.-L. Asselin-Labat*,
  2. F. Vaillant*,
  3. M. Shackleton*,
  4. T. Bouras*,
  5. G.J. Lindeman* and
  6. J.E. Visvader*
  1. *VBCRC Laboratory, The Walter and Eliza Hall Institute of Medical Research, Melbourne, VIC 3050, Australia
  1. Correspondence: visvader{at}wehi.edu.au

Abstract

Reconstitution assays have shown that mouse mammary stem cells reside within the mature mammary gland in vivo. Single cells could be prospectively isolated and shown to regenerate an entire mammary gland that exhibited full developmental capacity. The more recent identification of luminal progenitor populations has indicated that the mammary epithelium is organized in a hierarchical manner. Further definition of epithelial cell types in both mouse and human mammary glands will provide insight into the “cells of origin” in the different subtypes of breast cancer, as well as the nature of cancer-propagating cells. Here, we review the known characteristics of mammary stem and progenitor cells, their steroid receptor status, and the pathways that have thus far been implicated in regulating their self-renewal and differentiation.

Footnotes

  • Present address: Life Sciences Institute, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109.

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