TRAF6 maintains mammary stem cells and promotes pregnancy-induced epithelial cell expansion in mammary gland development
Date
Location
Description
Dear All,
Cell Signal Unit (Yamamoto Unit) would like to inform you of a seminar by Dr. Jun-ichiro Inoue, Institute of Medical Science, The University of Tokyo.
-----------------------------------------------------------
Date: Wednesday, February 10, 2021
Time: 11:00-12:00
Venue: L4F01 (Lab 4, Level F)
or
ZOOM: https://oist.zoom.us/j/92541889235?pwd=akYyNm5qTlJpcXUxcWtUSkl3SGQrZz09
Meeting ID: 925 4188 9235
*If you need the passcode, please contact "yuki.nakagawa[at]oist.jp".
-----------------------------------------------------------
Speaker:
Dr. Jun-ichiro Inoue, Institute of Medical Science, The University of Tokyo
Title:
TRAF6 maintains mammary stem cells and promotes pregnancy-induced epithelial cell expansion in mammary gland development
Abstract:
RANK signaling promotes pregnancy-dependent epithelial cell differentiation and expansion for mammary gland development, which requires NF-kB pathway-dependent Cyclin D1 induction and Id2 pathway-dependent anti-apoptotic gene induction. However, the roles of tumor necrosis factor receptor-associated factor 6 (TRAF6) remain unclear despite its requirement in RANK signaling. We have recently demonstrated that TRAF6 is crucial for both mammary stem cell maintenance and pregnancy-induced epithelial cell expansion. TRAF6 deficiency impairs PI3K/AKT and canonical NF-kB pathways, whereas noncanonical NF-kB signaling remains functional. Therefore, we propose that TRAF6 promotes cell proliferation by activating PI3K/AKT signaling to induce RB phosphorylation in concert with noncanonical NF-kB pathway-dependent Cyclin D1 induction. Furthermore, TRAF6 inhibits apoptosis by activating canonical NF-kB signaling to induce anti-apoptotic genes with the Id2 pathway. Therefore, proper orchestration of TRAF6-dependent and -independent RANK signals likely establishes mammary gland formation
Host:
Prof. Tadashi Yamamoto
We hope to see many of you at the seminar.
Best regards,
Yuki Nakagawa
Research Unit Administrator
Cell Signal Unit
Subscribe to the OIST Calendar: Right-click to download, then open in your calendar application.