Abstract

It has been proposed that the erosion of telomere length is a limiting factor in replicative capacity and important in cell senescence. To determine if this activity was essential in the mouse mammary gland in vivo, we serially transplanted mammary fragments from wild type (TER+/+), heterozygous (TER+/−), and homozygous (TER−/−) mammary tissues into the cleared mammary fat pads of immune-compromised nude mice. Individual implants from both homozygous and heterozygous TER null outgrowths showed growth senescence beginning at transplant generation two, earlier than implants from TER+/+ mammary glands which continued to show growth. This result suggests that either mammary epithelial stem cells maintain their telomere length in order to self renew, or that the absence or reduction of telomerase template results in more frequent death/extinction of stem cells during symmetric divisions. A third possibility is the inability of signaling cells in the niche to replicate resulting in reduction of the maintenance signals necessary for stem cell renewal. Consistent with this, examination of senescent outgrowths revealed the absence of estrogen receptor alpha (ERα+) epithelium although progesterone receptor (PR+) cells were abundant. Despite their inability to establish mammary growth in vivo, TER+/− cells were able to direct neural stem cells to mammary cell fates.