Accumulation of multipotent progenitors with a basal differentiation bias during aging of human mammary epithelia. Academic Article uri icon

Overview

abstract

  • Women older than 50 years account for 75% of new breast cancer diagnoses, and the majority of these tumors are of a luminal subtype. Although age-associated changes, including endocrine profiles and alterations within the breast microenvironment, increase cancer risk, an understanding of the cellular and molecular mechanisms that underlies these observations is lacking. In this study, we generated a large collection of normal human mammary epithelial cell strains from women ages 16 to 91 years, derived from primary tissues, to investigate the molecular changes that occur in aging breast cells. We found that in finite lifespan cultured and uncultured epithelial cells, aging is associated with a reduction of myoepithelial cells and an increase in luminal cells that express keratin 14 and integrin-α6, a phenotype that is usually expressed exclusively in myoepithelial cells in women younger than 30 years. Changes to the luminal lineage resulted from age-dependent expansion of defective multipotent progenitors that gave rise to incompletely differentiated luminal or myoepithelial cells. The aging process therefore results in both a shift in the balance of luminal/myoepithelial lineages and to changes in the functional spectrum of multipotent progenitors, which together increase the potential for malignant transformation. Together, our findings provide a cellular basis to explain the observed vulnerability to breast cancer that increases with age.

publication date

  • May 2, 2012

Research

keywords

  • Aging
  • Cell Differentiation
  • Cellular Senescence
  • Mammary Glands, Human
  • Multipotent Stem Cells

Identity

PubMed Central ID

  • PMC3399034

Scopus Document Identifier

  • 84863915064

Digital Object Identifier (DOI)

  • 10.1158/0008-5472.CAN-12-0157

PubMed ID

  • 22552289

Additional Document Info

volume

  • 72

issue

  • 14