Research resource: Progesterone receptor targetome underlying mammary gland branching morphogenesis

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Abstract

Progesterone (P4)-activated progesterone receptors (PRs) play an essential role in driving pregnancy- associated mammary ductal side-branching morphogenesis and alveologenesis. However, the global cistromic and transcriptome responses that are required to elicit P4-dependent branching morphogenesis have not been elucidated. By combining chromatin immunoprecipitation followed by deep sequencing to identify genome-wide PR-binding sites in PR-positive luminal epithelial cells with global gene expression signatures acutely regulated by PRs in the mammary gland, we have identified a mammary epithelial PR targetome associated with active P4- dependent branching morphogenesis in vivo. We demonstrate that P4-induced side-branching is initiated by epithelial cell rearrangement into a multilayered epithelium that sprouts laterally from quiescent ducts via a mechanism requiring P4-dependent activation of Rac-GTPase signaling. We identify effectors of Rac-GTPases as direct transcriptional targets of PRs, and we demonstrate that disruption of the P4-activated Rac-GTPase signaling axis is sufficient to eliminate P4-dependent side-branching. Our data reveal that the molecular mediators of P4-dependent ductal side-branching overlap with those implicated in breast cancer. © 2013 by The Endocrine Society.

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Lain, A. R., Creighton, C. J., & Conneely, O. M. (2013). Research resource: Progesterone receptor targetome underlying mammary gland branching morphogenesis. Molecular Endocrinology, 27(10), 1743–1761. https://doi.org/10.1210/me.2013-1144

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