Reference SummaryLandis MD, Oncogene 2006 Jun 1;25(23):3325-34

Title

Sustained trophism of the mammary gland is sufficient to accelerate and synchronize development of ErbB2/Neu-induced tumors.

Authors

Landis MD; Seachrist DD; Abdul-Karim FW; Keri RA

Journal

Oncogene

Volume

25

Issue

23

Year

2006

Pages

3325-34

Abstract

Epidemiological studies indicate that parity enhances HER2/ErbB2/Neu-induced breast tumorigenesis. Furthermore, recent studies using multiparous, ErbB2/Neu-overexpressing mouse mammary tumor virus (MMTV-Neu) mice have shown that parity induces a population of cells that are targeted for ErbB2/Neu-induced transformation. Although parity accelerates mammary tumorigenesis, the pattern of tumor development in multiparous MMTV-Neu mice remains stochastic, suggesting that additional events are required for ErbB2/Neu to cause mammary tumors. Whether such events are genetic in nature or reflective of the dynamic hormonal control of the gland that occurs with pregnancy remains unclear. We postulated that young age at pregnancy initiation or chronic trophic maintenance of mammary epithelial cells might provide a cellular environment that significantly increases susceptibility to ErbB2/Neu-induced tumorigenesis. MMTV-Neu mice that were maintained pregnant or lactating beginning at 3 weeks of age demonstrated accelerated tumorigenesis, but this process was still stochastic, indicating that early pregnancy does not provide the requisite events of tumorigenesis. However, bitransgenic mice that were generated by breeding MMTV-Neu mice with a luteinizing hormone-overexpressing mouse model of ovarian hyperstimulation developed multifocal mammary tumors in an accelerated, synchronous manner compared to virgin MMTV-Neu animals. This synchrony of tumor development in the bitransgenic mice suggests that trophic maintenance of the mammary gland provides the additional events required for tumor formation and maintains the population of cells that are targeted by ErbB2/Neu for transformation. Both the synchrony of tumor appearance and the ability to characterize a window of commitment by ovariectomy/palpation studies permitted microarray analysis to evaluate changes in gene expression over a defined timeline that spans the progression from normal to preneoplastic mammary tissue. These approaches led to identification of several candidate genes whose expression changes in the mammary gland with commitment to ErbB2/Neu-induced tumorigenesis, suggesting that they may either be regulated by ErbB2/Neu and/or contribute to tumor formation.

Links

J:112325 – MGI References
16434967 – National Library of Medicine/PubMed

Models

Strain Model Name Treatment Agent(s) Organ Affected Frequency Model Details
FVB/N-Tg(Cga-LHB/CGB)94Jhn Tg(MMTVneu)202Mul Mammary gland hyperplasia
  • ovariectomy
Mammary gland

observed

FVB/N-Tg(MMTVneu)202Mul Mammary gland tumor Mammary gland

100

FVB/N-Tg(Cga-LHB/CGB)94Jhn Tg(MMTVneu)202Mul Mammary gland tumor Mammary gland

100

FVB/N-Tg(MMTVneu)202Mul Mammary gland tumor Mammary gland

75

FVB/N-Tg(Cga-LHB/CGB)94Jhn Tg(MMTVneu)202Mul Mammary gland tumor
  • ovariectomy
Mammary gland

33 - 100

FVB/N-Tg(Cga-LHB/CGB)94Jhn Tg(MMTVneu)202Mul Mammary gland tumor - solid Mammary gland

observed

FVB/N-Tg(MMTVneu)202Mul Mammary gland tumor - solid Mammary gland

observed