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Published in: Breast Cancer Research 6/2003

Open Access 01-12-2003 | Research article

Transforming growth factor beta-regulated gene expression in a mouse mammary gland epithelial cell line

Authors: Lu Xie, Brian K Law, Mary E Aakre, Mary Edgerton, Yu Shyr, Neil A Bhowmick, Harold L Moses

Published in: Breast Cancer Research | Issue 6/2003

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Abstract

Background

Transforming growth factor beta (TGF-β) plays an essential role in a wide array of cellular processes. The most well studied TGF-β response in normal epithelial cells is growth inhibition. In some cell types, TGF-β induces an epithelial to mesenchymal transition (EMT). NMuMG is a nontransformed mouse mammary gland epithelial cell line that exhibits both a growth inhibitory response and an EMT response to TGF-β, rendering NMuMG cells a good model system for studying these TGF-β effects.

Method

A National Institutes of Aging mouse 15,000 cDNA microarray was used to profile the gene expression of NMuMG cells treated with TGF-β1 for 1, 6, or 24 hours. Data analyses were performed using GenePixPro and GeneSpring software. Selected microarray results were verified by northern analyses.

Results

Of the 15,000 genes examined by microarray, 939 were upregulated or downregulated by TGF-β. This represents approximately 10% of the genes examined, minus redundancy. Seven genes previously not known to be regulated by TGF-β at the transcriptional level (Akt and RhoB) or not at all (IQGAP1, mCalpain, actinin α3, Ikki, PP2A-PR53), were identified and their regulation by TGF-β verified by northern blotting. Cell cycle pathway examination demonstrated downregulation of cyclin D2, c-myc, Id2, p107, E2F5, cyclin A, cyclin B, and cyclin H. Examination of cell adhesion-related genes revealed upregulation of c-Jun, α-actinin, actin, myosin light chain, p120cas catenin (Catns), α-integrin, integrin β5, fibronectin, IQGAP1, and mCalpain.

Conclusion

Using a cDNA microarray to examine TGF-β-regulated gene expression in NMuMG cells, we have shown regulation of multiple genes that play important roles in cell cycle control and EMT. In addition, we have identified several novel TGF-β-regulated genes that may mediate previously unknown TGF-β functions.
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Metadata
Title
Transforming growth factor beta-regulated gene expression in a mouse mammary gland epithelial cell line
Authors
Lu Xie
Brian K Law
Mary E Aakre
Mary Edgerton
Yu Shyr
Neil A Bhowmick
Harold L Moses
Publication date
01-12-2003
Publisher
BioMed Central
Published in
Breast Cancer Research / Issue 6/2003
Electronic ISSN: 1465-542X
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/bcr640

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