Mammary molecular portraits reveal lineage-specific features and progenitor cell vulnerabilities

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Abstract

The mammary epithelium depends on specific lineages and their stem and progenitor function to accommodate hormone-triggered physiological demands in the adult female. Perturbations of these lineages underpin breast cancer risk, yet our understanding of normal mammary cell composition is incomplete. Here, we build a multimodal resource for the adult gland through comprehensive profiling of primary cell epigenomes, transcriptomes, and proteomes. We define systems-level relationships between chromatin-DNA-RNA-protein states, identify lineage-specific DNA methylation of transcription factor binding sites, and pinpoint proteins underlying progesterone responsiveness. Comparative proteomics of estrogen and progesterone receptor-positive and -negative cell populations, extensive target validation, and drug testing lead to discovery of stem and progenitor cell vulnerabilities. Top epigenetic drugs exert cytostatic effects; prevent adult mammary cell expansion, clonogenicity, and mammopoiesis; and deplete stem cell frequency. Select drugs also abrogate human breast progenitor cell activity in normal and high-risk patient samples. This integrative computational and functional study provides fundamental insight into mammary lineage and stem cell biology.

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Casey, A. E., Sinha, A., Singhania, R., Livingstone, J., Waterhouse, P., Tharmapalan, P., … Khokha, R. (2018). Mammary molecular portraits reveal lineage-specific features and progenitor cell vulnerabilities. Journal of Cell Biology, 217(8), 2951–2974. https://doi.org/10.1083/jcb.201804042

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