Cover Story 2014, Volume 9 Issue 3
The stem/progenitor cells in the murine mammary gland are a highly dynamic population of cells that are responsible for ductal elongation in puberty, homeostasis maintenance in adult, and lobulo-alveolar genesis during pregnancy. In recent years, understanding the epithelial cell hierarchy within the mammary gland is becoming particularly important as these different stem/progenitor cells were perceived to be the cells of origin for various subtypes of breast cancer. Although significant advances have been made in enrichment and isolation of stem/progenitor cells by combinations of antibodies against cell surface proteins together with flow cytometry and in identification of stem/progenitor cells with multi-lineage differentiation and self-renewal using mammary fat pad reconstitution assay and in vivo genetic labeling technique, a clear understanding of how these different stem/progenitors are orchestrated in the mammary gland is still lacking. In a review article in this issue, Dong and Sun discuss the different in vivo and in vitro methods currently available for stem/progenitor identification and their associated caveats. The illustration on the cover provides a novel hypothetical cell hierarchy model these authors proposed to reconcile various putative stem/progenitor cell populations identified by different research groups. In this model, bipotent stem cells in fetus give rise to luminal (filled in red color) and basal (filled in gray color) progenitors in prepubertal and pubertal glands. The luminal and basal lineage can be further divided into ductal (shaped with black outline) and alveolar-restricted (shaped with purple outline) progenitors. The luminal and basal alveolar progenitors are to be activated during pregnancy. The triangle bar indicates progenitor cells with decreasing multi- or uni-potency during the development from prepubertal to adult glands. Curves represent different stem/progenitors that are predominant in the epithelial cell population at different developmental stages. The dashed lines indicate potential possibilities. Cell markers labeled under each stem/progenitor cells correspond to published studies. (Image illustrated by Qiaoxiang Dong. See pages 175-185 by Dong and Sun for more information).[Detail] ...