Mammary mechanobiology - investigating roles for mechanically activated ion channels in lactation and involution.
Teneale A StewartKatherine HughesAlexander J StevensonNatascia MarinoAdler L JuMichael MoreheadFelicity Mae DavisPublished in: Journal of cell science (2021)
The ability of a mother to produce a nutritionally complete neonatal food source has provided a powerful evolutionary advantage to mammals. Milk production by mammary epithelial cells is adaptive, its release is exquisitely timed, and its own glandular stagnation with the permanent cessation of suckling triggers the cell death and tissue remodeling that enables female mammals to nurse successive progeny. Chemical and mechanical signals both play a role in this process. However, despite this duality of input, much remains unknown about the nature and function of mechanical forces in this organ. Here, we characterize the force landscape in the functionally mature gland and the capacity of luminal and basal cells to experience and exert force. We explore molecular instruments for force-sensing, in particular channel-mediated mechanotransduction, revealing increased expression of Piezo1 in mammary tissue in lactation and confirming functional expression in luminal cells. We also reveal, however, that lactation and involution proceed normally in mice with luminal-specific Piezo1 deletion. These findings support a multifaceted system of chemical and mechanical sensing in the mammary gland, and a protective redundancy that ensures continued lactational competence and offspring survival.
Keyphrases
- cell cycle arrest
- cell death
- induced apoptosis
- single molecule
- poor prognosis
- human milk
- dairy cows
- genome wide
- endoplasmic reticulum stress
- single cell
- high fat diet
- oxidative stress
- binding protein
- cell proliferation
- gene expression
- pi k akt
- signaling pathway
- long non coding rna
- preterm infants
- low birth weight
- climate change
- high fat diet induced