Blum J L, Zeigler M E, Wicha M S
Department of Internal Medicine, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor 48109.
Exp Cell Res. 1987 Dec;173(2):322-40. doi: 10.1016/0014-4827(87)90274-6.
In the mammary gland the induction and maintenance of differentiation are dependent on both lactogenic hormones and the extracellular matrix (ECM). Since mammary epithelial cells differentiate on a basement membrane in vivo we have examined the effects of basement membrane components on the expression of milk protein genes in primary rat mammary cultures. We examined the effects of a basement membrane gel derived from the Englebreth-Holm-Swarm tumor as well as its major component, laminin, on the expression of a group of milk protein genes. We demonstrate that the basement membrane gel induces alpha-casein and alpha-lactalbumin (alpha-LA) accumulation up to 160- and 70-fold, respectively, of that on tissue culture plastic. Laminin, a major component of the basement membrane, also caused significant induction of these same proteins. In order to determine whether these ECM effects occurred at a translational or post-translational level, pulse-chase experiments were performed. These experiments demonstrated that a laminin substratum selectively effects milk protein turnover and secretion. In order to demonstrate whether ECM effects occurred at the level of steady state accumulation of mRNA we performed dot blot and Northern analyses using cloned cDNA probes for alpha-, beta-, and gamma-caseins and alpha-LA. These studies demonstrated that ECM components induced alpha- and beta-caseins up to 10-fold, and alpha-LA up to 3-fold, with no significant effect on gamma-casein. These results demonstrate that milk protein genes are not coordinately regulated by ECM components. Furthermore, since the amount of induction of milk proteins exceeds the amount of induction of mRNAs for these proteins, we conclude that in our system a major effect of ECM components is at the translational and/or post-translational levels. Based on these findings we propose a model in which basement membrane components effect mammary gene expression at multiple levels.
在乳腺中,分化的诱导和维持既依赖于催乳激素,也依赖于细胞外基质(ECM)。由于乳腺上皮细胞在体内是在基底膜上分化的,我们研究了基底膜成分对原代大鼠乳腺培养物中乳蛋白基因表达的影响。我们研究了源自Englebreth-Holm-Swarm肿瘤的基底膜凝胶及其主要成分层粘连蛋白对一组乳蛋白基因表达的影响。我们证明,基底膜凝胶诱导α-酪蛋白和α-乳白蛋白(α-LA)的积累分别比在组织培养塑料上高出160倍和70倍。基底膜的主要成分层粘连蛋白也显著诱导了这些相同蛋白质的表达。为了确定这些ECM效应是发生在翻译水平还是翻译后水平,我们进行了脉冲追踪实验。这些实验表明,层粘连蛋白基质选择性地影响乳蛋白的周转和分泌。为了证明ECM效应是否发生在mRNA稳态积累水平,我们使用α-、β-和γ-酪蛋白以及α-LA的克隆cDNA探针进行了斑点印迹和Northern分析。这些研究表明,ECM成分诱导α-和β-酪蛋白高达10倍,α-LA高达3倍,而对γ-酪蛋白没有显著影响。这些结果表明,乳蛋白基因不受ECM成分的协同调节。此外,由于乳蛋白的诱导量超过了这些蛋白的mRNA诱导量,我们得出结论,在我们的系统中,ECM成分的主要作用是在翻译和/或翻译后水平。基于这些发现,我们提出了一个模型,其中基底膜成分在多个水平上影响乳腺基因表达。