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      Scribble promotes alveologenesis in the pregnant mammary gland for milk production.

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          Abstract

          Mammary glands are comprised of ducts and terminal lobules that form tree-like structures. Luminal epithelial cells in these lobules undergo differentiation into alveolar cells in pregnancy to support milk production. This study reveals that Scribble (SCRIB), a scaffold protein expressed in progesterone receptor (PGR)-positive cells, plays a critical role in mammary gland alveologenesis in mice. We conditionally deleted Scrib using a Pgr-Cre driver. PGR is heterogeneously expressed throughout the luminal epithelium. Scrib loss in mammary glands by Pgr-Cre (Scribf/fPgrCre/+) shows inefficient alveologenesis and terminal end bud (TEB)-like morphology during pregnancy, resulting in poor milk production and subsequent death of pups after delivery. The differentiation of PGR-positive epithelial cells into Elf5-expressing alveolar cells is defective in Scribf/fPgrCre/+ mice. These changes are reflected in reduced activation of JAK2 and PAK1, resulting in downregulation of pSTAT5, a critical transcriptional factor for alveologenesis. These results provide evidence that SCRIB impacts PGR-positive cell lineage during alveologenesis, which impacts milk production and the health of offspring.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          Reproduction
          Reproduction (Cambridge, England)
          Bioscientifica
          1741-7899
          1470-1626
          May 2020
          : 159
          : 6
          Affiliations
          [1 ] Division of Reproductive Sciences, Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center, Cincinnati, Ohio, USA.
          [2 ] College of Medicine, University of Cincinnati, Cincinnati, Ohio, USA.
          Article
          REP-20-0108 NIHMS1587256
          10.1530/REP-20-0108
          7241298
          32213656
          54ba30d6-0f06-405b-9950-1c2f1704c82d
          History

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