Multi-Level Regulation of Milk Protein Expression in the Mammary Gland
Itamar Barash - The Volcani Center
Milk is often refereed to as "nearly the perfect food" and protein
is the most valuable gross component in milk. Regulation of milk
protein synthesis has been associated with anatomical and spatial
adaptation of the mammary gland to the reproductive cycle and is
performed at several levels.
The signal transducer and activator of transcription, Stat5, transduces
extracellular cytokine and growth factor signals to the nucleus of
mammary epithelial cells and thereby regulates gene transcription
during pregnancy, lactation and weaning. Expression levels and states
of activity of Stat5 in the mammary gland tissue were manipulated by
introducing Stat5 variants as transgenes into the pronuclei of
transgenic mice. Overexpression and forced activation of Stat5
induced mammary gland development during pregnancy and delayed
apoptosis-associated involution. β-casein synthesis and secretion into
milk during lactation were enhanced and pup growth was accelerated.
Delayed mammary glad maturation and induced apoptosis were associated
with expression of Stat5 variant lacking its C-terminally
transactivation domain. Interestingly, transgenic females over 8 months
old, which expressed all Stat5 transgenic varients, were predisposed to
tumor formation in the mammary gland. Undifferentiated carcinomas most
frequently occurred in mice expressing the C-terminally truncated
Stat5. The more differentiated papillary and micropapillary
adenocarcinomas were primarily found in mice overexpressing the native
and constitutively active transgenes.
Whereas caseins are the major milk proteins, β-lactoglobulin (BLG)
could be considered the most characteristic of ruminants, due to its
absence from human and murine milk, and its highest level in the
ruminant whey. We have defined a regulatory element, termed
BLG-e1, in the distal region of the ovine BLG gene promoter. This
299-bp element lacks the established cis-regulatory sequences that
affect milk-protein gene expression. Nevertheless, it alters the
binding of downstream BLG sequences to histone H4 and the sensitivity
of the histone-DNA complexes to trichostatin A treatment. In
mammary cells cultured under favorable lactogenic conditions, BLG-e1
acts as a potent, position-independent silencer of BLG/luciferase
expression, and similarly affects the promoter activity of the mouse
whey acidic protein (WAP) gene. Intragenic sequences upstream of BLG
exon 2 reverse the silencing effect of BLG-e1 in vitro and in
transgenic mice.
While transcriptin regulation of milk protein synthesis has been
extensively studied, post-transcriptional regulation has been
relatively uninvestigated. In cultured mouse mammary CID-9 cells,
we have studied the synergistic effect of insulin and prolactin on
β-casein synthesis and showed that when added together, these hormones
increase β-casein mRNA translation, reflected by a shift to larger
polysomes. The poly(A) tract of the β-casein mRNA progressively
increased with the addition of insulin and prolactin, indicating
regulation of of cytoplasmatic poly(A) polymerase activity.
The notion that post trascriptional mechanism govern milk protein
expression and accumulation in milk has been suported by our studies on
the role of amino acids (AA) on milk protein expression. We have
compared bovine and murine mammary epithelial cells and showed that the
bovine cells are more sucestible to AA, perticularly leucine (Leu)
manipulation. The sharper decrease in BLG synthesis in AA or Leu -
deprived bovine cells has been associated with a more marked decrease
in the phosphorylation of the translation factors 4E-BP1 and S6K1. This
probably reflects a faster and more pronounced operation of the
signaling aparatus in the bovine cells and a more rapid shutdown of
translation in the face of AA insufficiency. Our finding that Leu
sepcifically induced BLG translation and that rapamycin, an mTOR
inhibitor, specifically reduced Leu and AA - stimulated translation
intiation in a dose dependent manner suggest that direct signaling from
AA to the translational machinary is involved in determining the rates
of milk protein synthesis in mammary epithelial cells.

