Cooperation of membrane-translocated syntaxin4 and basement membrane for dynamic mammary epithelial morphogenesis
Mammary epithelia undergo dramatic morphogenesis after puberty. During pregnancy, luminal epithelial cells in ductal trees are arranged to form well-polarized cystic structures surrounded by a myoepithelial cell layer, an active supplier of the basement membrane (BM). Here, we identified a novel reg...
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Zusammenfassung: | Mammary epithelia undergo dramatic morphogenesis after puberty. During
pregnancy, luminal epithelial cells in ductal trees are arranged to form
well-polarized cystic structures surrounded by a myoepithelial cell layer,
an active supplier of the basement membrane (BM). Here, we identified a
novel regulatory mechanism involved in this process by using a
reconstituted BM-based three-dimensional culture and aggregates of a model
mouse cell line, EpH4, that had either been manipulated for inducible
expression of the t-SNARE protein syntaxin4 in an intact or signal
peptide-connected form, or that were genetically deficient in syntaxin4.
We found that cells extruded syntaxin4 upon stimulation with the
lactogenic hormone, prolactin, which in turn accelerated the turnover of
E-cadherin. In response to extracellular expression of syntaxin4, cell
populations that were less affected by the BM actively migrated and
integrated into the cell layer facing the BM. Concurrently, the BM-facing
cells, which were simultaneously stimulated with syntaxin4 and BM,
acquired unique epithelial characteristics to undergo dramatic cellular
arrangement for cyst formation. These results highlight the importance of
the concerted action of extracellular syntaxin4 extruded in response to
the lactogenic hormone and BM components in epithelial morphogenesis. |
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DOI: | 10.5061/dryad.12jm63z05 |