To investigate the role of β-catenin in mammary gland development and neoplasia, we expressed a stabilized, transcriptionally active form of β-catenin lacking the NH2-terminal 89 amino acids (ΔN89β-catenin) under the control of the mouse mammary tumor virus long terminal repeat. Our results show that ΔN89β-catenin induces precocious lobuloalveolar development and differentiation in the mammary glands of both male and female mice. Virgin ΔN89β-catenin mammary glands resemble those found in wild-type (wt) pregnant mice and inappropriately express cyclin D1 mRNA. In contrast to wt mammary glands, which resume a virgin appearance after cessation of lactation, transgenic mammary glands involute to a midpregnant status. All transgenic females develop multiple aggressive adenocarcinomas early in life. Surprisingly, the ΔN89β-catenin phenotype differs from those elicited by overexpression of Wnt genes in this gland. In particular, ΔN89β-catenin has no effect on ductal side branching. This suggests that Wnt induction of ductal branching involves additional downstream effectors or modulators.
The locus for Werner syndrome (WRN) has been localized to human chromosome 8p21→p 12, close to the anonymous marker D8S339. A 3.1-Mb contig of yeast artificial chromosomes (YACs) was assembled around D8S339. Results from analyses of somatic cell hybrids, FISH, and physical mapping suggest the following loci order: tel-NEFL-D8S131-D8S339-[D8S540/GSR]-D8S124-D8S259-D8S87-FGFRl-cen. Close physical linkage between D8S540 and GSR was established within a DNA fragment of 200 kb. These two loci are not more than 400 kb from D8S339. In addition, D8S339, D8S540, D8S124, and GSR are within 1.1 Mb. These data establish a primary physical map of the Werner syndrome region and identify useful YAC clones for the isolation of new markers and of the corresponding gene.
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