The breast cancer-associated stromelysin-3 gene is expressed during mouse mammary gland apoptosis.

Olivier Lefèbvre(Laboratoire de Biologie Moléculaire et Cellulaire des Eucaryotes), C Wolf(Laboratoire de Biologie Moléculaire et Cellulaire des Eucaryotes), J.M. Limacher(Laboratoire de Biologie Moléculaire et Cellulaire des Eucaryotes), P. Hutin(Laboratoire de Biologie Moléculaire et Cellulaire des Eucaryotes), Corinne Wendling(Laboratoire de Biologie Moléculaire et Cellulaire des Eucaryotes), Marianne LeMeur(Laboratoire de Biologie Moléculaire et Cellulaire des Eucaryotes), Paul Basset(Laboratoire de Biologie Moléculaire et Cellulaire des Eucaryotes), M. C. Rio(Laboratoire de Biologie Moléculaire et Cellulaire des Eucaryotes)
The Journal of Cell Biology
November 15, 1992
Cited by 174Open Access
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Abstract

We have cloned from a mouse placenta cDNA library a mouse homologue of the human stromelysin-3 (ST3) cDNA, which codes for a putative matrix metalloproteinase expressed in breast carcinomas. The ST3 protein is well conserved between humans and mice, and the pattern of ST3 gene expression is similar in both species, and shows expression in the placenta, in the uterus, and during limb bud morphogenesis. We show that the ST3 gene can also be expressed in the normal mouse mammary gland. ST3 gene expression was not detected during mammary growth, neither in virgin nor in pregnant mice, but was specifically observed during postlactating involution of the gland, an apoptotic process associated with intense extracellular matrix remodeling. ST3 transcripts were found in fibroblasts immediately surrounding degenerative ducts, suggesting that ST3 gene expression may be associated with the basement membrane dissolution, which occurs during mammary gland involution. Since the ST3 gene is also specifically expressed in fibroblastic cells surrounding invasive neoplastic cells of breast carcinomas, we suggest that ST3 is implicated in extracellular matrix remodeling processes common to mammary apoptosis and breast cancer progression.


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