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Department of Pharmacology

 
Author(s): 
Twigger, A-J, Engelbrecht, LK, Bach, K, Schultz-Pernice, I, Pensa, S, Stenning, J, Petricca, S, Scheel, CH, Khaled, WT
Abstract: 

<jats:title>Abstract</jats:title><jats:p>Under normal conditions, the most significant expansion and differentiation of the adult mammary gland occurs in response to systemic reproductive hormones during pregnancy and lactation to enable milk synthesis and secretion to sustain the offspring. However, human mammary tissue remodelling that takes place during pregnancy and lactation remains poorly understood due to the challenge of acquiring samples. We report here single-cell transcriptomic analysis of 110,744 viable breast cells isolated from human milk or non-lactating breast tissue, isolated from nine and seven donors, respectively. We found that human milk largely contains epithelial cells belonging to the luminal lineage and a repertoire of immune cells. Further transcriptomic analysis of the milk cells identified two distinct secretory cell types that shared similarities with luminal progenitors, but no populations comparable to hormone-responsive cells. Taken together, our data offers a reference map and a window into the cellular dynamics that occur during human lactation and may provide further insights on the interplay between pregnancy, lactation and breast cancer.</jats:p>

Publication ID: 
1363729
Published date: 
28 January 2022 (Published online)
Publication source: 
crossref
Publication type: 
Journal articles
Journal name: 
Nature Communications
Publication volume: 
13
Publisher: 
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Parent title: 
Edition: 
Publication number: 
562