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Journal ArticleDOI

Detection and analysis of mammary gland stem cells.

John Stingl
- 01 Jan 2009 - 
- Vol. 217, Iss: 2, pp 229-241
TLDR
Assays used to detect mammary stem and progenitor cells, some of the properties of these cells and their progeny and how they relate to the cancer stem cells that drive breast tumour growth are focused on.
Abstract
Emerging evidence from a variety of tissue types, including the mammary gland, suggests that normal stem and progenitor cells are the likely targets for malignant transformation, and that these transformed cells can function as cancer stem cells that drive tumour growth. In order to develop therapies that target these cancer stem cells, it is essential to determine the molecular mechanisms that regulate the growth and differentiation of these cells and their normal counterparts. To this end, a number of quantitative robust clonal assays have been developed that can detect the presence of human and mouse mammary stem and progenitor cells. These assays, when used in conjunction with cell-sorting strategies, have permitted the prospective isolation and characterization of a variety of cell types, including stem cells. Evidence to date indicates that these stem cells exhibit properties of basal mammary cells, possess extensive self-renewal properties, and are capable of generating a large number of phenotypically-distinct progenitor cells, many of which display characteristics of luminal cells. This review article will focus on the assays used to detect mammary stem and progenitor cells, some of the properties of these cells and their progeny and how they relate to the cancer stem cells that drive breast tumour growth.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

The Wnt Receptor, Lrp5, Is Expressed by Mouse Mammary Stem Cells and Is Required to Maintain the Basal Lineage

TL;DR: This work demonstrates that Wnt signaling through Lrp5 is an important component of normal mammary stem cell function, and is the first single biomarker that has been demonstrated to be functionally involved in stem cell maintenance.
Journal ArticleDOI

Musashi1 regulates breast tumor cell proliferation and is a prognostic indicator of poor survival

TL;DR: Msi1 is a negative prognostic indicator of breast cancer patient survival, and is indicative of tumor cells with stem cell-like characteristics, suggesting that it may represent a novel target for drug discovery.
Journal ArticleDOI

Mammosphere formation assay from human breast cancer tissues and cell lines.

TL;DR: Approaches for the appropriate culturing of mammospheres from cell lines or primary patient samples, their passaging, and calculations to estimate sphere forming efficiency (SFE) are outlined.
Journal ArticleDOI

MicroRNA-205 signaling regulates mammary stem cell fate and tumorigenesis

TL;DR: Evidence is provided that links tumor microenvironment and microRNA-dependent regulation to disruption of epithelial polarity and aberrant mammary stem cell division, which in turn leads to an expansion of stem cell population and tumorigenesis.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

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Journal ArticleDOI

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Journal ArticleDOI

Stem cells, cancer, and cancer stem cells

TL;DR: Stem cell biology has come of age: Unequivocal proof that stem cells exist in the haematopoietic system has given way to the prospective isolation of several tissue-specific stem and progenitor cells, the initial delineation of their properties and expressed genetic programmes, and the beginnings of their utility in regenerative medicine.
Journal ArticleDOI

Human acute myeloid leukemia is organized as a hierarchy that originates from a primitive hematopoietic cell

TL;DR: It is demonstrated that the cell capable of initiating human AML in non-obese diabetic mice with severe combined immunodeficiency disease (NOD/SCID mice) — termed the SCID leukemia-initiating cell, or SL-IC — possesses the differentiate and proliferative capacities and the potential for self-renewal expected of a leukemic stem cell.
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