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Characterization of the Six1 homeobox gene in normal mammary gland morphogenesis

BACKGROUND: The Six1 homeobox gene is highly expressed in the embryonic mammary gland, continues to be expressed in early postnatal mammary development, but is lost when the mammary gland differentiates during pregnancy. However, Six1 is re-expressed in breast cancers, suggesting that its re-instate...

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Autores principales: Coletta, Ricardo D, McCoy, Erica L, Burns, Valerie, Kawakami, Kiyoshi, McManaman, James L, Wysolmerski, John J, Ford, Heide L
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2010
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2823684/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20074369
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-213X-10-4
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author Coletta, Ricardo D
McCoy, Erica L
Burns, Valerie
Kawakami, Kiyoshi
McManaman, James L
Wysolmerski, John J
Ford, Heide L
author_facet Coletta, Ricardo D
McCoy, Erica L
Burns, Valerie
Kawakami, Kiyoshi
McManaman, James L
Wysolmerski, John J
Ford, Heide L
author_sort Coletta, Ricardo D
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: The Six1 homeobox gene is highly expressed in the embryonic mammary gland, continues to be expressed in early postnatal mammary development, but is lost when the mammary gland differentiates during pregnancy. However, Six1 is re-expressed in breast cancers, suggesting that its re-instatement in the adult mammary gland may contribute to breast tumorigenesis via initiating a developmental process out of context. Indeed, recent studies demonstrate that Six1 overexpression in the adult mouse mammary gland is sufficient for initiating invasive carcinomas, and that its overexpression in xenograft models of mammary cancer leads to metastasis. These data demonstrate that Six1 is causally involved in both breast tumorigenesis and metastasis, thus raising the possibility that it may be a viable therapeutic target. However, because Six1 is highly expressed in the developing mammary gland, and because it has been implicated in the expansion of mammary stem cells, targeting Six1 as an anti-cancer therapy may have unwanted side effects in the breast. RESULTS: We sought to determine the role of Six1 in mammary development using two independent mouse models. To study the effect of Six1 loss in early mammary development when Six1 is normally expressed, Six1(-/- )embryonic mammary glands were transplanted into Rag1(-/- )mice. In addition, to determine whether Six1 downregulation is required during later stages of development to allow for proper differentiation, we overexpressed Six1 during adulthood using an inducible, mammary-specific transgenic mouse model. Morphogenesis of the mammary gland occurred normally in animals transplanted with Six1(-/- )embryonic mammary glands, likely through the redundant functions of other Six family members such as Six2 and Six4, whose expression was increased in response to Six1 loss. Surprisingly, inappropriate expression of Six1 in the adult mammary gland, when levels are normally low to absent, did not inhibit normal mammary differentiation during pregnancy or lactation. CONCLUSIONS: Six1 is not critical for normal mammary gland development, since neither loss nor inappropriate overexpression of Six1 adversely affects normal mammary gland development or function. However, as both Six2 and Six4 levels are increased in Six1(-/- )mammary glands, we postulate that these Six family members are functionally redundant in the gland, as is true of many homeobox gene families. This data, in conjunction with recent findings that Six1 is capable of promoting breast cancer initiation and progression, suggest that Six1 may serve as a reasonable chemotherapeutic target in a clinical setting, particularly for those women diagnosed with breast cancer in their childbearing years.
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spelling pubmed-28236842010-02-18 Characterization of the Six1 homeobox gene in normal mammary gland morphogenesis Coletta, Ricardo D McCoy, Erica L Burns, Valerie Kawakami, Kiyoshi McManaman, James L Wysolmerski, John J Ford, Heide L BMC Dev Biol Research article BACKGROUND: The Six1 homeobox gene is highly expressed in the embryonic mammary gland, continues to be expressed in early postnatal mammary development, but is lost when the mammary gland differentiates during pregnancy. However, Six1 is re-expressed in breast cancers, suggesting that its re-instatement in the adult mammary gland may contribute to breast tumorigenesis via initiating a developmental process out of context. Indeed, recent studies demonstrate that Six1 overexpression in the adult mouse mammary gland is sufficient for initiating invasive carcinomas, and that its overexpression in xenograft models of mammary cancer leads to metastasis. These data demonstrate that Six1 is causally involved in both breast tumorigenesis and metastasis, thus raising the possibility that it may be a viable therapeutic target. However, because Six1 is highly expressed in the developing mammary gland, and because it has been implicated in the expansion of mammary stem cells, targeting Six1 as an anti-cancer therapy may have unwanted side effects in the breast. RESULTS: We sought to determine the role of Six1 in mammary development using two independent mouse models. To study the effect of Six1 loss in early mammary development when Six1 is normally expressed, Six1(-/- )embryonic mammary glands were transplanted into Rag1(-/- )mice. In addition, to determine whether Six1 downregulation is required during later stages of development to allow for proper differentiation, we overexpressed Six1 during adulthood using an inducible, mammary-specific transgenic mouse model. Morphogenesis of the mammary gland occurred normally in animals transplanted with Six1(-/- )embryonic mammary glands, likely through the redundant functions of other Six family members such as Six2 and Six4, whose expression was increased in response to Six1 loss. Surprisingly, inappropriate expression of Six1 in the adult mammary gland, when levels are normally low to absent, did not inhibit normal mammary differentiation during pregnancy or lactation. CONCLUSIONS: Six1 is not critical for normal mammary gland development, since neither loss nor inappropriate overexpression of Six1 adversely affects normal mammary gland development or function. However, as both Six2 and Six4 levels are increased in Six1(-/- )mammary glands, we postulate that these Six family members are functionally redundant in the gland, as is true of many homeobox gene families. This data, in conjunction with recent findings that Six1 is capable of promoting breast cancer initiation and progression, suggest that Six1 may serve as a reasonable chemotherapeutic target in a clinical setting, particularly for those women diagnosed with breast cancer in their childbearing years. BioMed Central 2010-01-14 /pmc/articles/PMC2823684/ /pubmed/20074369 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-213X-10-4 Text en Copyright ©2010 Coletta et al; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0 This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Research article
Coletta, Ricardo D
McCoy, Erica L
Burns, Valerie
Kawakami, Kiyoshi
McManaman, James L
Wysolmerski, John J
Ford, Heide L
Characterization of the Six1 homeobox gene in normal mammary gland morphogenesis
title Characterization of the Six1 homeobox gene in normal mammary gland morphogenesis
title_full Characterization of the Six1 homeobox gene in normal mammary gland morphogenesis
title_fullStr Characterization of the Six1 homeobox gene in normal mammary gland morphogenesis
title_full_unstemmed Characterization of the Six1 homeobox gene in normal mammary gland morphogenesis
title_short Characterization of the Six1 homeobox gene in normal mammary gland morphogenesis
title_sort characterization of the six1 homeobox gene in normal mammary gland morphogenesis
topic Research article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2823684/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20074369
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-213X-10-4
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