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Numb regulates cell tension required for mammary duct elongation
Author(s) -
Sudipa June Chatterjee,
Ruba Halaoui,
Rebecca Catherine Deagle,
Carlis Rejon,
Luke McCaffrey
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
biology open
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.936
H-Index - 41
ISSN - 2046-6390
DOI - 10.1242/bio.042341
Subject(s) - numb , biology , morphogenesis , microbiology and biotechnology , cell polarity , elongation , epithelium , extracellular matrix , stroma , cell , cell growth , stromal cell , anatomy , cancer research , immunology , materials science , biochemistry , genetics , gene , immunohistochemistry , ultimate tensile strength , metallurgy
The mammary gland undergoes extensive expansion of a ductal network through the stroma during puberty and is an excellent model for understanding epithelial tube morphogenesis. To investigate a role for Numb, a multifaceted adapter protein, in epithelial tube morphogenesis, we conditionally deleted it from the mammary epithelium. We report that Numb-depletion results in altered extracellular-matrix organization, reduced cell tension, altered cell shape, and increased cell packing density, which results in a 50% reduction in mammary duct elongation. Using laser ablation in vitro and geometric-based cell force inference in vivo , we determined that Numb-deficient cells have altered cortical tension. Duct elongation defects were associated with altered E-cadherin distribution, but were independent of proliferation, apoptosis in ducts or end buds. This highlights a critical role for Numb in a mechanical mechanism that is required to maintain cell packing density during epithelial tube elongation.

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