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Accelerated mammary cancer development by fetal salivary mesenchyma isografted to adult mouse mammary epithelium.
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1981
Year
Breast OncologyMammary EpitheliumPathologySalivary GlandCancer BiologyMammary Gland DevelopmentTumor BiologyTissue DevelopmentCancer Cell BiologyCancer ResearchMammary GlandEpithelial-mesenchymal InteractionsCell BiologyTumor MicroenvironmentDevelopmental BiologyBreast CancerAdult Mammary GlandsFetal Salivary MesenchymaMammary Gland BiologyMedicine
Transplantation of fetal salivary mesenchyma into adult mammary glands resulted in atypical outgrowths from the mammary duct system. These duct-alveolus nodules (DAN) were distinguishable from hyperplastic alveolar nodules (HAN) that arose from normal mammary duct systems in mice infected with murine mammary tumor virus (MuMTV). DAN displayed a type of ductal branching characteristic of salivary gland rather than of mammary gland, reflecting a tissue-specific perturbation of epithelium-mesenchyma in DAN in milk-transmitted MuMTV-infected C3H/HeN mice and in MuMTV-negative BALB/c mice given 7,12-dimethylbenz[a]anthracene (DMBA) subsequent to transplantation of fetal salivary mesenchyma. Mammary cancers were not increased in milk-transmitted MuMTV-free C3H/HeN and GRS/A mice that received salivary mesenchyma transplants. Salivary mesenchyma accelerated mammary carcinogenesis by increasing the mammary epithelial cell population responsive to MuMTV and DMBA.