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ABSTRACT: Usual ductal hyperplasia of the breast is a committed
stem (progenitor) cell lesion distinct from atypical ductal hyperplasia
and ductal carcinoma in situ
Current classification systems in proliferative mammary
gland pathology are based on a two-cell system, recognizing
only glandular and myoepithelial lines of differentiation.
A
third cell type has recently been characterized in normal breast
tissue by double-immunofluorescence analysis to express cytokeratin
5 (Ck5) only. These cells were shown to represent progenitor
or adult stem cells that give rise to the glandular and myoepithelial
cell lineage.
The double-labelling technique has been applied
to characterize a spectrum of intraductal epithelial proliferations,
namely benign usual ductal hyperplasia, atypical ductal hyperplasia,
and ductal carcinoma in situ, all of which are thought to represent
the gradual steps of a sequence in the development of breast
cancer.
Immunofluorescence studies with specific antibodies against
Ck5, Ck8/18/19, and smooth muscle actin were complemented by
western blotting analysis of Ck5 and Ck8/18/19 expression in
normal breast tissue and in proliferative lesions.
Usual ductal
hyperplasia appears to be a Ck5-positive committed stem (progenitor)
cell lesion with the same differentiation potential as seen in
the normal breast. This is in sharp contrast to atypical ductal
hyperplasia/ductal carcinoma in situ, which display the differentiated
glandular immunophenotype (Ck8/18/19-positive, but Ck5-negative).
These data require the abandonment of the idea of an obligate
biological continuum of intraductal proliferations from benign
to malignant. This study provides evidence that cells undergoing
malignant transformation tend to be fairly advanced in the glandular
lineage of differentiation. The committed stem (progenitor) cell
model may contribute to a better understanding of both benign
proliferative breast disease and breast cancer development.
[11/18/2002; The Journal of Pathology]
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