Using antisera to specific proteins, the localization of the rat mammary parenchymal cells (both epithelial and myoepithelial), the basement membrane, and connective tissue components has been studied during the four physiological stages of the adult rat mammary gland, viz. resting, pregnant, lactating, and involuting glands. Antisera to myosin and prekeratin were used to localize myoepithelial cells, antisera to rat milk fat globule membrane for epithelial cells, antisera to laminin and type IV collagen to delineate the basement membrane and antisera to type I collagen and fibronectin as markers for connective tissue. In the resting, virgin mammary gland, myoepithelial cells appear to form a continuous layer around the epithelial cells and are in turn surrounded by a continuous basement membrane. Antiserum to fibronectin does not delineate the basement membrane in the resting gland. The ductal system is surrounded by connective tissue. Only the basal or myoepithelial cells in the terminal end buds of neonatal animals demonstrate cytoplasmic staining for basement membrane proteins, indicating active synthesis of these proteins during this period. In the secretory alveoli of the lactating rat, the myoepithelial cells no longer appear to form a continuous layer beneath the epithelial cells and in many areas the epithelial cells appear to be in contact with the basement membrane. The basement membrane in the lactating gland is still continuous around the ducts and alveoli. In the lactating gland, fibronectin appears to be located in the basement membrane region in addition to being a component of the stroma. During involution, the alveoli collapse, and appear to be in a state of dissolution. The basement membrane is thicker and is occasionally incomplete, as also are the basket-like myoepithelial structures. Basement membrane components can also be demonstrated throughout the collapsed alveoli.
Tripeptidyl peptidase I (TPP-I) is a lysosomal enzyme that cleaves tripeptides from the N-terminus of polypeptides. A comparison of TPP-I amino acid sequences with sequences derived from an EST database suggested that TPP-I is identical to a pepstatin-insensitive carboxyl proteinase of unknown specificity which is mutated in classical late infantile neuronal ceroid lipofuscinosis (LINCL), a lysosomal storage disease. Both TPP-I and the carboxyl proteinase have an M r of about 46 kDa and are, or are predicted to be, resistant to inhibitors of the four major classes of proteinases. Fibroblasts from LINCL patients have less than 5% of the normal TPP-I activity. The activities of other lysosomal enzymes, including proteinases, are in the normal range. LINCL fibroblasts are also defective at degrading short polypeptides and this defect can be induced in normal fibroblasts by treatment with a specific inhibitor or TPP-I. These results suggest that the cell damage, especially neuronal, observed in LINCL results from the defective degradation and consequent lysosomal storage of small peptides.z 1999 Federation of European Biochemical Societies.
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