Estrogen regulation of mammary involution and its implication in Parity Associated Breast Cancer

With the onset of pregnancy, the mammary gland undergoes a cycle of mammary alveolar development, lactation, followed by post-partum mammary involution to return back to pre-pregnancy state. Epidemiological studies indicated that each pregnancy increases the risk of breast cancer within 10 years of...

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Main Author: Lim, Chew Leng
Other Authors: Valerie Lin Chun Ling
Format: Thesis-Doctor of Philosophy
Language:English
Published: Nanyang Technological University 2020
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Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10356/136744
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-1367442020-11-01T04:51:29Z Estrogen regulation of mammary involution and its implication in Parity Associated Breast Cancer Lim, Chew Leng Valerie Lin Chun Ling Interdisciplinary Graduate School (IGS) cllin@ntu.edu.sg Science::Biological sciences With the onset of pregnancy, the mammary gland undergoes a cycle of mammary alveolar development, lactation, followed by post-partum mammary involution to return back to pre-pregnancy state. Epidemiological studies indicated that each pregnancy increases the risk of breast cancer within 10 years of child birth, known as Parity-Associated Breast Cancer (PABC). Previous study has suggested that the tissue microenvironment during mammary involution promotes mammary tumorigenesis which is further accelerated by estrogen. Despite the extensive studies of estrogen effect on postnatal mammary development, limited knowledge was available in its regulation of post-partum mammary involution. In this study, I seek to characterize the effect of estrogen in post-partum mammary involution and evaluate the potential role of mammary neutrophils during this process. I also investigated the effect of estrogen on circulating neutrophils in mice with or without tumour and determined how it can bring about a pro-tumoral effect contributing to the development of PABC. Using RNA-seq analysis, this study revealed that estrogen plays a significant role in the regulation of many aspects of mammary involution. Estrogen treatment enhanced the progression of mammary involution by stimulating increased expression of pro-inflammatory factors, cell death markers, adipogenesis modulator, and tissue remodelling genes. It was also demonstrated that some of these processes such as inflammation, adipocyte repopulation, and tissue remodelling was mediated through the estrogen-regulated mammary neutrophil activities. Using a mice tumour model inoculated with ER-negative 4T1-Luc2 breast cancer cells, this study showed that estrogen significantly increased the tumour growth during mammary involution as compared to the age-matched nulliparous mice. In addition to stimulating tumour growth via tissue neutrophil activity, estrogen also exerts strong effect on circulating neutrophils. Interestingly, whilst estrogen induced the expression of pro-tumoral factors in circulating neutrophils, it reduced markedly the number of the putatively pro-tumoral low-density neutrophils by decreasing its production from the bone marrow and increasing apoptosis in both nulliparous and involuting tumour bearing mice. In summary, this study demonstrated that estrogen strongly promotes mammary involution and much of the estrogenic effect was mediated through the regulation of mammary neutrophil activity. This study also showed that estrogen exerts strong effect on circulating neutrophil activity in mice bearing mammary tumours and stimulates the expression of pro-tumoral factors. Together, these data indicate the importance of estrogen regulation of mammary involution and in PABC. Furthermore, estrogen plays a pivotal role in the regulation of activity of both mammary and circulating neutrophils that likely contribute to the pro-tumoral effect of estrogen via the tumour microenvironment. Doctor of Philosophy 2020-01-14T12:58:04Z 2020-01-14T12:58:04Z 2019 Thesis-Doctor of Philosophy Lim, C. L. (2019). Estrogen regulation of mammary involution and its implication in Parity Associated Breast Cancer. Doctoral thesis, Nanyang Technological University, Singapore. https://hdl.handle.net/10356/136744 10.32657/10356/136744 en This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License (CC BY-NC 4.0). application/pdf Nanyang Technological University
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
continent Asia
country Singapore
Singapore
content_provider NTU Library
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic Science::Biological sciences
spellingShingle Science::Biological sciences
Lim, Chew Leng
Estrogen regulation of mammary involution and its implication in Parity Associated Breast Cancer
description With the onset of pregnancy, the mammary gland undergoes a cycle of mammary alveolar development, lactation, followed by post-partum mammary involution to return back to pre-pregnancy state. Epidemiological studies indicated that each pregnancy increases the risk of breast cancer within 10 years of child birth, known as Parity-Associated Breast Cancer (PABC). Previous study has suggested that the tissue microenvironment during mammary involution promotes mammary tumorigenesis which is further accelerated by estrogen. Despite the extensive studies of estrogen effect on postnatal mammary development, limited knowledge was available in its regulation of post-partum mammary involution. In this study, I seek to characterize the effect of estrogen in post-partum mammary involution and evaluate the potential role of mammary neutrophils during this process. I also investigated the effect of estrogen on circulating neutrophils in mice with or without tumour and determined how it can bring about a pro-tumoral effect contributing to the development of PABC. Using RNA-seq analysis, this study revealed that estrogen plays a significant role in the regulation of many aspects of mammary involution. Estrogen treatment enhanced the progression of mammary involution by stimulating increased expression of pro-inflammatory factors, cell death markers, adipogenesis modulator, and tissue remodelling genes. It was also demonstrated that some of these processes such as inflammation, adipocyte repopulation, and tissue remodelling was mediated through the estrogen-regulated mammary neutrophil activities. Using a mice tumour model inoculated with ER-negative 4T1-Luc2 breast cancer cells, this study showed that estrogen significantly increased the tumour growth during mammary involution as compared to the age-matched nulliparous mice. In addition to stimulating tumour growth via tissue neutrophil activity, estrogen also exerts strong effect on circulating neutrophils. Interestingly, whilst estrogen induced the expression of pro-tumoral factors in circulating neutrophils, it reduced markedly the number of the putatively pro-tumoral low-density neutrophils by decreasing its production from the bone marrow and increasing apoptosis in both nulliparous and involuting tumour bearing mice. In summary, this study demonstrated that estrogen strongly promotes mammary involution and much of the estrogenic effect was mediated through the regulation of mammary neutrophil activity. This study also showed that estrogen exerts strong effect on circulating neutrophil activity in mice bearing mammary tumours and stimulates the expression of pro-tumoral factors. Together, these data indicate the importance of estrogen regulation of mammary involution and in PABC. Furthermore, estrogen plays a pivotal role in the regulation of activity of both mammary and circulating neutrophils that likely contribute to the pro-tumoral effect of estrogen via the tumour microenvironment.
author2 Valerie Lin Chun Ling
author_facet Valerie Lin Chun Ling
Lim, Chew Leng
format Thesis-Doctor of Philosophy
author Lim, Chew Leng
author_sort Lim, Chew Leng
title Estrogen regulation of mammary involution and its implication in Parity Associated Breast Cancer
title_short Estrogen regulation of mammary involution and its implication in Parity Associated Breast Cancer
title_full Estrogen regulation of mammary involution and its implication in Parity Associated Breast Cancer
title_fullStr Estrogen regulation of mammary involution and its implication in Parity Associated Breast Cancer
title_full_unstemmed Estrogen regulation of mammary involution and its implication in Parity Associated Breast Cancer
title_sort estrogen regulation of mammary involution and its implication in parity associated breast cancer
publisher Nanyang Technological University
publishDate 2020
url https://hdl.handle.net/10356/136744
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