4.7 Article

p120-catenin is essential for terminal end bud function and mammary morphogenesis

Journal

DEVELOPMENT
Volume 139, Issue 10, Pages 1754-1764

Publisher

COMPANY BIOLOGISTS LTD
DOI: 10.1242/dev.072769

Keywords

p120 catenin (catenin delta 1); Cadherin; Mammary development; Morphogenesis; Mouse

Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health [NIH R01 CA111947, NIH R01 CA55724, NIH R01 CA085492, NIH 2PO1CA099031-06A185492]
  2. Department of Defense [BC083306]
  3. Terry Fox Foundation [020002]
  4. Canadian Institutes of Health Research [MOP 93525, MOP 89751]
  5. German Cancer Aid
  6. Vanderbilt Cancer Center [NIH P30 CA068485]
  7. Vanderbilt Breast SPORE [NIH P50 CA98131]

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Although p120-catenin (p120) is crucial for E-cadherin function, ablation experiments in epithelial tissues from different organ systems reveal markedly different effects. Here, we examine for the first time the consequences of p120 knockout during mouse mammary gland development. An MMTV-Cre driver was used to target knockout to the epithelium at the onset of puberty. p120 ablation was detected in approximately one-quarter of the nascent epithelium at the forth week post-partum. However, p120 null cells were essentially nonadherent, excluded from the process of terminal end bud (TEB) morphogenesis and lost altogether by week six. This elimination process caused a delay in TEB outgrowth, after which the gland developed normally from cells that had retained p120. Mechanistic studies in vitro indicate that TEB dysfunction is likely to stem from striking E-cadherin loss, failure of cell-cell adhesion and near total exclusion from the collective migration process. Our findings reveal an essential role for p120 in mammary morphogenesis.

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