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Journal ArticleDOI

Lobulo-alveolar development of mouse mammary glands is regulated by thyroid hormones.

Barbara K. Vonderhaar, +1 more
- 01 Feb 1979 - 
- Vol. 104, Iss: 2, pp 409-418
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TLDR
The results suggest that thyroid hormones, in concert with PRL, play an important role in the regulation of development of the mouse mammary gland.
Abstract
The mammary glands of euthyroid female C3H/HeN mice undergo a series of morphological changes during development. In glands from immature animals, the epithelial component consists of a sparse ductal system with few branches which fills about one fourth of the fat pad. In the adult virgin gland, the epithelial component fills the fat pad with a highly branched ductal system and a few alveoli. In contrast, glands from adult animals maintained in a hypothyroid state by ingestion of thiouracil since weaning retain the primitive ductal appearance while filling the fat pad. The glands from animals made hyperthroid by adding 2 micrograms T4/ml drinking water have extensive lobulo-alveolar development. Glands from animals made hypothyroid during 7 weeks of involution after lactation have the same degree of deveopment as the euthyroid controls. When explants of tissue from adult hypothyroid virgin animals are cultured in serum-free medium containing insulin, hydrocortisone, and PRL, the specific milk protein, alpha-lactalbumin, is induced. The level of alpha-lactalbumin, measured as lactose synthetase activity, found per ng epithelial DNA is the same as that found in explants from glands of euthyroid virgins. These results suggest that thyroid hormones, in concert with PRL, play an important role in the regulation of development of the mouse mammary gland. Decreased levels of thyroid hormones in the serum result in retarded growth of the ductal system and little or no alveolar development. However, the resulting epithelial component of glands from hypothyroid mice is fully capable of differentiating in vitro when exposed to the proper hormonal environment.

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Citations
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Elevated expression of activated forms of Neu/ErbB-2 and ErbB-3 are involved in the induction of mammary tumors in transgenic mice: implications for human breast cancer.

TL;DR: It is argued that co‐expression of ErbB‐2 and ErBB‐3 may play a critical role in the induction of human breast tumors, and the possibility that activating mutations in the Erb B‐2 receptor may also contribute to this process is raised.
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Transforming growth factor β signaling impairs Neu-induced mammary tumorigenesis while promoting pulmonary metastasis

TL;DR: It is argued that TGF-β can promote the formation of lung metastases while impairing Neu-induced tumor growth and suggest that extravasation of breast cancer cells from pulmonary vessels is a point of action of TGF -β in the metastatic process.
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Tissue Hyperplasia and Enhanced T-Cell Signalling via ZAP-70 in c-Cbl-Deficient Mice

TL;DR: This study provides the first biochemical characterization of any organism that is deficient in a member of the Cbl protein family and demonstrates critical roles for c-Cbl in hemopoiesis and in controlling cellular proliferation and signalling by the Syk/ZAP-70 family of protein kinases.
Book ChapterDOI

Hormonal Control of Amphibian Metamorphosis

TL;DR: This chapter restricts coverage in this chapter primarily to recent work on the endocrine control of development and metamorphosis in amphibians, and will not be able to consider environmental factors that affect these processes, or the recent findings on the control of transformations in other vertebrates.
Journal ArticleDOI

Establishing a framework for the functional mammary gland: from endocrinology to morphology.

TL;DR: Defining the hormonal control of ductal development should facilitate a better understanding of the mechanisms underlying mammary gland tumorigenesis and provide the opportunity to further delineate the regulation ofductal development.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

A study of the conditions and mechanism of the diphenylamine reaction for the colorimetric estimation of deoxyribonucleic acid

TL;DR: The present study arose from the observation that a more intense colour was sometimes produced if, instead of being heated at 1000 for 10 min., the reaction mixture was allowed to stand overnight at room temperature.
Journal Article

Prolactin and Murine Mammary Tumorigenesis: A Review

TL;DR: If prolactin can be shown to influence human breast epithelium in a manner similar to its effect on rodent mammary tissue, then prophylactic and/of chemotherapeutic control of human breast tumorigenesis may be feasible by appropriate drug-mediated Prolactin suppression.
Journal ArticleDOI

Thyrotropin releasing hormone: Direct evidence for stimulation of prolactin production by pituitary cells in culture

TL;DR: Addition of thyrotropin releasing hormone to the medium of 2 clonal strains of functional rat pituitary cells stimulated the production of prolactin and inhibited growth hormone production and there was no effect on cell growth.
Journal ArticleDOI

Some physiological, biochemical, and behavioral consequences of neonatal hormone administration: Cortisol and thyroxine ☆

TL;DR: The presence of specific hormones in excess of ontogenetically inappropriate times during development may compromise the capability of certain adaptive or survival value mechanisms at later stages of the life cycle, as well as provide for the later full expression of these adaptive mechanisms.
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