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Proceedings of the Society for Experimental Biology and Medicine 224:76-86 (2000)
© 2000 Society for Experimental Biology and Medicine


Original Article

Glucocorticoids Maintain the Extracellular Matrix of Differentiated Mammary Tissue During Explant and Whole Organ Culture

Theresa M. Casey*, Almuth Boecker*, Jen-Fu Chiu{dagger} and Karen Plaut*,1


* Department of Animal Sciences and
{dagger} Department of Biochemistry, University of Vermont, Burlington, Vermont 05405

Mouse mammary whole organ culture (WOC) and explant culture of lactating tissue were used to investigate the mechanism by which glucocorticoids maintain secretory epithelium following lobuloalveolar development. The relative number of mammary epithelial cells expressing glucocorticoid receptors did not change with the loss of secretory epithelium during involution as demonstrated with competitive binding assays and immunohistochemistry for the glucocorticoid receptor. Furthermore, glucocorticoids did not inhibit AP-1 binding activity. However, Northern analysis demonstrated that genes associated with the breakdown of the extracellular matrix were not expressed in tissues cultured with glucocorticoids, in contrast to their upregulation during involution of mammary tissue cultured with insulin alone. Tissue inhibitor of metalloproteinase-1 (TIMP-1) mRNA expression was lowest in tissue cultured in the presence of glucocorticoids and increased 2.3-, 3.4-, and 9-fold when tissues were involuted in the presence of insulin (Ins) alone, Ins and hydrocortisone (Hyd) with 0.005 mg/ml, or 0.01 mg/ml collagenase IV, respectively. These data indicate that glucocorticoids maintain mammary differentiation in part by inhibiting the turnover of basement membrane.







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