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Keywords
(10)
Asymmetric Division
Cell Cycle
Dna Replication
Epithelial Cell
Genetics
Immunohistochemi...
Mammary Gland
Progenitor Cell
Progesterone Receptor
Estrogen Receptor
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Immortalized, premalignant epithelial cell populations contain long-lived, label-retaining cells that asymmetrically divide and retain their template DNA
Immortalized, premalignant epithelial cell populations contain long-lived, label-retaining cells that asymmetrically divide and retain their template
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Immortalized, premalignant epithelial cell populations contain long-lived, label-retaining cells that asymmetrically divide and retain their template DNA
(
Citations: 2
)
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Karen M Bussard
,
Corinne A Boulanger
,
Frances S Kittrell
,
Fariba Behbod
,
Daniel Medina
,
Gilbert H Smith
ABSTRACT: INTRODUCTION: During selective segregation of DNA, a cell asymmetrically divides and retains its template DNA.
Asymmetric division
yields daughter cells whose genome reflects that of the parents, simultaneously protecting the parental cell from genetic errors that may occur during DNA replication. We hypothesized that long-lived epithelial cells are present in immortal, premalignant cell populations, undergo asymmetric division, retain their template DNA strands, and cycle both during allometric growth and during pregnancy. METHODS: The glands of 3-week-old immune-competent Balb/C female mice were used intact or cleared of host epithelium and implanted with ductal-limited, lobule-limited, or alveolar-ductal progenitor cells derived from COMMA-D1 pre-malignant epithelial cells. 5-Bromo-2-deoxyuridine (5-BrdU) was administered to identify those cells that retain their template DNA. Nulliparous mice were then either injected with [3H]-thymidine (3H-TdR) to distinguish 5-BrdU label-retaining cells that enter the
cell cycle
and euthanized, or mated, injected with 3H-TdR, and euthanized at various days after coitus. Sections were stained for estrogen receptor-α (ER-α) or
progesterone receptor
(PR) with immunohistochemistry. Cells labeled with both 5-BrdU and 3H-TdR were indicative of label-retaining epithelial cells (LRECs). RESULTS: Cells that retained a 5-BrdU label and cells labeled with [3H]-thymidine were found in all mice and were typically detected along the branching epithelium of mature mouse mammary glands. Cells containing double-labeled nuclei (LRECs) were found in the intact mammary glands of both pregnant and nulliparous mice, and in mammary glands implanted with premalignant cells. Double-labeled cells (3H-TdR/5-BrdU) represent a small portion of cells in the
mammary gland
that cycle and retain their template DNA (5-BrdU). Some label-retaining cells were also ER-α or PR positive. LRECs distributed their second label (3H-TdR) to daughter cells, and this effect persisted during pregnancy. LRECs, and small focal hyperplasia, were found in all immortalized premalignant mammary-implant groups. CONCLUSIONS: The results indicate that a subpopulation of long-lived, label-retaining epithelial cells (LRECs) is present in immortal premalignant cell populations. These LRECs persist during pregnancy, retain their original DNA, and a small percentage express ER-α and PR. We speculate that LRECs in premalignant hyperplasia represent the long-lived (memory) cells that maintain these populations indefinitely.
Journal:
Breast Cancer Research - BREAST CANCER RES
, vol. 12, no. 5, pp. R86-13, 2010
DOI:
10.1186/bcr2754
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Citation Context
(1)
...In a previous issue, Bussard and colleagues [
1
] reacquaint us with John Cairns’ immortal strand hypothesis, postulated some 35 years ago [2]...
Nikolajs Zeps
,
et al.
Chasing the immortal strand: evidence for nature's way of protecting t...
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(
Citations: 411
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(
Citations: 17
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,
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,
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(
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Journal:
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Label-retaining epithelial cells in mouse mammary gland divide asymmetrically and retain their template DNA strands
(
Citations: 104
)
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(
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)
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,
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Citations
(2)
Chasing the immortal strand: evidence for nature's way of protecting the breast genome
Nikolajs Zeps
,
Christine Hemmings
Journal:
Breast Cancer Research - BREAST CANCER RES
, vol. 13, no. 1, pp. 101-2, 2011
Label Retaining Cells and Cutaneous Stem Cells
Vasily V. Terskikh
,
Andrey V. Vasiliev
,
Ekaterina A. Vorotelyak
Journal:
Stem Cell Reviews and Reports
, pp. 1-12