Johnson Abby L, Zinser Glendon M, Waltz Susan E
Departments of Environmental Health and.
Departments of Environmental Health and Cancer Biology, University of Cincinnati College of Medicine, Cincinnati, Ohio; and.
Am J Physiol Endocrinol Metab. 2014 Oct 15;307(8):E674-85. doi: 10.1152/ajpendo.00200.2014. Epub 2014 Aug 19.
Vitamin D₃ receptor (VDR) signaling within the mammary gland regulates various postnatal stages of glandular development, including puberty, pregnancy, involution, and tumorigenesis. Previous studies have shown that vitamin D₃ treatment induces cell-autonomous growth inhibition and differentiation of mammary epithelial cells in culture. Furthermore, mammary adipose tissue serves as a depot for vitamin D₃ storage, and both epithelial cells and adipocytes are capable of bioactivating vitamin D₃. Despite the pervasiveness of VDR in mammary tissue, individual contributions of epithelial cells and adipocytes, as well as the VDR-regulated cross-talk between these two cell types during pubertal mammary development, have yet to be investigated. To assess the cell-type specific effect of VDR signaling during pubertal mammary development, novel mouse models with mammary epithelial- or adipocyte-specific loss of VDR were generated. Interestingly, loss of VDR in either cellular compartment accelerated ductal morphogenesis with increased epithelial cell proliferation and decreased apoptosis within terminal end buds. Conversely, VDR signaling specifically in the mammary epithelium modulated hormone-induced alveolar growth, as ablation of VDR in this cell type resulted in precocious alveolar development. In examining cellular cross-talk ex vivo, we show that ligand-dependent VDR signaling in adipocytes significantly inhibits mammary epithelial cell growth in part through the vitamin D₃-dependent production of the cytokine IL-6. Collectively, these studies delineate independent roles for vitamin D₃-dependent VDR signaling in mammary adipocytes and epithelial cells in controlling pubertal mammary gland development.
乳腺内的维生素D₃受体(VDR)信号传导调节腺体发育的各个出生后阶段,包括青春期、怀孕、退化和肿瘤发生。先前的研究表明,维生素D₃处理可诱导培养的乳腺上皮细胞发生细胞自主生长抑制和分化。此外,乳腺脂肪组织是维生素D₃储存的场所,上皮细胞和脂肪细胞都能够将维生素D₃生物活化。尽管VDR在乳腺组织中普遍存在,但上皮细胞和脂肪细胞的个体作用,以及这两种细胞类型在青春期乳腺发育过程中VDR调节的相互作用,尚未得到研究。为了评估VDR信号在青春期乳腺发育过程中的细胞类型特异性作用,我们构建了乳腺上皮或脂肪细胞特异性VDR缺失的新型小鼠模型。有趣的是,任何一个细胞区室中VDR的缺失都会加速导管形态发生,导致终末芽内上皮细胞增殖增加和细胞凋亡减少。相反,乳腺上皮中特异性的VDR信号传导调节激素诱导的腺泡生长,因为这种细胞类型中VDR的缺失会导致腺泡过早发育。在体外研究细胞间相互作用时,我们发现脂肪细胞中配体依赖性VDR信号传导部分通过细胞因子IL-6的维生素D₃依赖性产生显著抑制乳腺上皮细胞生长。总的来说,这些研究阐明了维生素D₃依赖性VDR信号在乳腺脂肪细胞和上皮细胞中对青春期乳腺发育的独立作用。