Literature DB >> 23561936

Mouse mammary gland is refractory to the effects of ethanol after natural lactation.

Jennifer-Marie Garofalo1, Dawn M Bowers, Richard W Browne, Brian T MacQueen, Terry Mashtare, Lisa B Martin, Patricia A Masso-Welch.   

Abstract

Ethanol is a dietary factor that dose-dependently increases breast cancer risk in women. We previously have shown that ethanol increases mammary epithelial density through increased branching after dietary exposure during puberty in CD2/F1 mice. To extend these studies to parous mice in a breast cancer model, we used a transgenic mouse model of human parity-associated breast cancer, the FVB-MMTV-Her2/Neu mouse, which overexpresses wildtype EGFR2, resulting in constitutive activation of growth signaling in the mammary epithelium. Here we describe the short-term effects of ethanol feeding on progression through involution. Mice were fed diets supplemented with 0%, 0.5%, 1%, or 2% ethanol for 4, 9, or 14 d starting on day 21 of lactation (that is, at the start of natural postlactational involution). Unlike peripubertal mice exposed to ethanol, postlactational dams showed no changes in body weight; liver, spleen, and kidney weights; and pathology. Ethanol exposure had no effect on mammary gland lobular density and adipocyte size throughout involution. Likewise, the infiltration of inflammatory cells and serum oxidized lipid species were unchanged by diet, suggesting that ethanol feeding had no effect on local inflammation (leukocyte infiltration) or systemic inflammation (oxidized lipids). In conclusion, ethanol exposure of parous dams had no effect on mammary gland structure or the regression of the lactating mammary gland to a resting state. The period of involution that follows natural lactation appears to be refractory to developmental effects of ethanol on mammary epithelium.

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Year:  2013        PMID: 23561936      PMCID: PMC3567375     

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Comp Med        ISSN: 1532-0820            Impact factor:   0.982


  55 in total

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Authors:  Michael C Rudolph; James L McManaman; Larry Hunter; Tzulip Phang; Margaret C Neville
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Journal:  Cancer Res       Date:  1991-01-15       Impact factor: 12.701

Review 4.  Animal models of human disease. Pathology and molecular biology of spontaneous neoplasms occurring in transgenic mice carrying and expressing activated cellular oncogenes.

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Journal:  Am J Pathol       Date:  1989-07       Impact factor: 4.307

5.  Mammary gland involution is delayed by activated Akt in transgenic mice.

Authors:  K L Schwertfeger; M M Richert; S M Anderson
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6.  Studies of the HER-2/neu proto-oncogene in human breast and ovarian cancer.

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Journal:  Lancet       Date:  2002-07-20       Impact factor: 79.321

10.  In utero alcohol exposure increases mammary tumorigenesis in rats.

Authors:  L Hilakivi-Clarke; A Cabanes; S de Assis; M Wang; G Khan; W J Shoemaker; R G Stevens
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