A Lamb1Dendra2 mouse model identifies basement-membrane-producing origins and dynamics in PyMT breast tumors

Jessica Morgner(The Netherlands Cancer Institute), Laura Bornes(The Netherlands Cancer Institute), Kerstin Hahn(The Netherlands Cancer Institute), Carmen López‐Iglesias(Maastricht University), Lona J. Kroese(The Netherlands Cancer Institute), Colin E.J. Pritchard(The Netherlands Cancer Institute), Claire Vennin(The Netherlands Cancer Institute), Peter J. Peters(Maastricht University), Ivo J. Huijbers(The Netherlands Cancer Institute), Jacco van Rheenen(The Netherlands Cancer Institute)
Developmental Cell
March 10, 2023
Cited by 28Open Access
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Abstract

The basement membrane (BM) around tumor lobes forms a barrier to prevent cancer cells from invading the surrounding tissue. Although myoepithelial cells are key producers of the healthy mammary epithelium BM, they are nearly absent in mammary tumors. To study the origin and dynamics of the BM, we developed and imaged a laminin beta1-Dendra2 mouse model. We show that the turnover of laminin beta1 is faster in the BMs that surround the tumor lobes than in the BMs that surround the healthy epithelium. Moreover, we find that epithelial cancer cells and tumor-infiltrating endothelial cells synthesize laminin beta1 and that this production is temporarily and locally heterogeneous, leading to local discontinuity of the BM laminin beta1. Collectively, our data draw a new paradigm for tumor BM turnover in which the disassembly happens at a constant rate, and a local misbalance of compensating production leads to reduction or even complete disappearance of the BM.


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