TY - JOUR
T1 - Maintenance of cell type diversification in the human breast
AU - Fridriksdottir, Agla Jael
AU - Villadsen, René
AU - Gudjonsson, Thorarinn
AU - Petersen, Ole William
N1 - Funding Information: We thank Lone Rønnov-Jessen for critical reading of the manuscript and Tove Marianne Lund for expert technical assistance. The Aasted Clinic, the Private Clinic, and the Søllerød Plastic Surgery Clinic are gratefully acknowledged for providing the biopsy material. The procedure for collection and use of breast tissue material has been judged consistent with law 503 of June 24, 1992, by the Regional Scientific-Ethical Committee for Copenhagen and Frederiks-berg, Denmark, file no. (KF) 01-216/93. We also wish to thank the following sources for funding: The Icelandic Research Council (TG), The Novo Nordisk Foundation, Friis Fonden, The Meyer Foundation, The Danish Cancer Society, The Danish Research Council, the European Commission Research Directorates (OWP, contract HPRN-CT-2002-00246), and The National Institutes of Health (grant CA-64786-02 to Mina Bissell and OWP).
PY - 2005/1
Y1 - 2005/1
N2 - Recent genome-wide expression analysis of breast cancer has brought new life to the classical idea of tumors as caricatures of the process of tissue renewal as envisioned by Pierce and Speers (Cancer Res 1988;48:1996-2004) more than a decade ago. The search for a cancer founder cell or different cancer founder cells is only possible if a hierarchy of differentiation has been established for the particular tissue in question. In the human breast, the luminal epithelial and myoepithelial lineages have been characterized extensively in situ by increasingly elaborate panel of markers, and methods to isolate, culture, and clone different subpopulations have improved dramatically. Comparisons have been made with the mouse mammary gland in physiological three-dimensional culture assays of morphogenesis, and the plasticity of breast epithelial cells has been challenged by immortalization and transformation. As a result of these efforts, several candidate progenitor cells have been proposed independently of each other, and some of their features have been compared. This research has all been done to better understand breast tissue homeostasis, cell-type diversification in general and breast cancer evolution in particular. The present review discusses the current approaches to address these issues and the measures taken to unravel and maintain cell type diversification for further investigation.
AB - Recent genome-wide expression analysis of breast cancer has brought new life to the classical idea of tumors as caricatures of the process of tissue renewal as envisioned by Pierce and Speers (Cancer Res 1988;48:1996-2004) more than a decade ago. The search for a cancer founder cell or different cancer founder cells is only possible if a hierarchy of differentiation has been established for the particular tissue in question. In the human breast, the luminal epithelial and myoepithelial lineages have been characterized extensively in situ by increasingly elaborate panel of markers, and methods to isolate, culture, and clone different subpopulations have improved dramatically. Comparisons have been made with the mouse mammary gland in physiological three-dimensional culture assays of morphogenesis, and the plasticity of breast epithelial cells has been challenged by immortalization and transformation. As a result of these efforts, several candidate progenitor cells have been proposed independently of each other, and some of their features have been compared. This research has all been done to better understand breast tissue homeostasis, cell-type diversification in general and breast cancer evolution in particular. The present review discusses the current approaches to address these issues and the measures taken to unravel and maintain cell type diversification for further investigation.
KW - Breast epithelium
KW - Differentiation
KW - Hierarchy
KW - Human
KW - Lineages
KW - Morphogenesis
KW - Plasticity
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/19444368723
U2 - 10.1007/s10911-005-2541-6
DO - 10.1007/s10911-005-2541-6
M3 - Review article
C2 - 15886887
SN - 1083-3021
VL - 10
SP - 61
EP - 74
JO - Journal of Mammary Gland Biology and Neoplasia
JF - Journal of Mammary Gland Biology and Neoplasia
IS - 1
ER -