Aging is associated with an expansion of CD49fhi mammary stem cells that show a decline in function and increased transformation potential
Author(s) -
Qiaoxiang Dong,
Hui Gao,
Yuanshuo Shi,
Fuchuang Zhang,
Xiang Gu,
Anqi Wu,
Danhan Wang,
Yuanhong Chen,
Abhik Bandyopadhyay,
ITien Yeh,
Benjamin J. Daniel,
Yidong Chen,
Yi Zou,
Vivienne I. Rebel,
Christi A. Walter,
Jianxin Lü,
Changjiang Huang,
LuZhe Sun
Publication year - 2016
Publication title -
aging
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.473
H-Index - 90
ISSN - 1945-4589
DOI - 10.18632/aging.101082
Subject(s) - biology , stem cell , basal (medicine) , stromal cell , carcinogenesis , transcriptome , neoplastic transformation , stem cell marker , population , cellular differentiation , microbiology and biotechnology , pathology , medicine , endocrinology , cancer research , gene expression , cancer , gene , biochemistry , genetics , environmental health , insulin
Breast cancer incidence increases during aging, yet the mechanism of age-associated mammary tumorigenesis is unclear. Mammary stem cells are believed to play an important role in breast tumorigenesis, but how their function changes with age is unknown. We compared mammary epithelial cells isolated from young and old mammary glands of different cohorts of C57BL6/J and BALB/c mice, and our findings revealed that old mammary glands were characterized by increased basal cell pool comprised of mostly CD49f hi cells, altered luminal-to-basal cell ratio, and irregular ductal morphology. More interestingly, basal stem cells in old mice were increased in frequency, but showed a functional decline of differentiation and increased neoplastic transformation potential. Gene signature enrichment analysis revealed a significant enrichment of a luminal cell gene expression signature in the basal stem cell-enriched population from old mice, suggesting some luminal cells were expressing basal markers. Immunofluorescence staining confirmed the presence of luminal cells with high CD49f expression in hyperplastic lesions implicating these cells as undergoing luminal to basal phenotypic changes during aging. Whole transcriptome analysis showed elevated immune and inflammatory responses in old basal stem cells and stromal cells, which may be the underlying cause for increased CD49f hi basal-like cells in aged glands.
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