The canonical NF-kappaB pathway is required for formation of luminal mammary neoplasias and is activated in the mammary progenitor population
- PMID: 19483731
- DOI: 10.1038/onc.2009.131
The canonical NF-kappaB pathway is required for formation of luminal mammary neoplasias and is activated in the mammary progenitor population
Abstract
The role of the canonical NF-kappaB pathway in mammary tumorigenesis was investigated using a transgenic (TG) mouse expressing a dominant-negative inhibitor of kappaB (IkappaBalpha(SR (S32A/S36A))) in the mammary gland under the control of the mouse mammary tumor virus promoter (MMTV). TG and control mice were subjected to a chemical carcinogenesis protocol. Hyperkeratinized squamous metaplasias (cytokeratin-6+/p63+) sometimes with a basaloid island component, were found in both TG and control mice whereas luminal (cytokeratin-19+/MUC1+) ErbB2+ papillary and adenomatous lesions developed almost exclusively in control mice. p65/RelA- and NF-kappaB DNA-binding activity were detected in mammary luminal lesions, but rarely in squamous metaplasias. Analysis of NF-kappaB family proteins and target genes using microarray data from a cohort of human mammary tumors revealed the expression of a canonical NF-kappaB pathway, but not non-canonical pathway proteins in HER2+ luminal cancers. HER2+ tumors also showed differential regulation of specific NF-kappaB target genes relative to basal and ER+ luminal cancers. Isolation of mammary cell populations enriched for stem and progenitor cell characteristics from an NF-kappaB-EGFP reporter mouse by fluorescence-activated cell sorting demonstrated that luminal progenitors contain activated NF-kappaB whereas the mammary stem cell-enriched population, does not. Together these data suggest that the canonical NF-kappaB pathway is active in normal luminal progenitor cells before transformation and is required for the formation of mammary luminal-type epithelial neoplasias.
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