Prolactin promotes the secretion of active cathepsin D at the basal side of rat mammary acini

Cathepsin D (CD), a lysosomal aspartic protease present in mammary tissue and milk in various molecular forms, is also found in the incubation medium of mammary acini in molecular forms that are proteolytically active on prolactin at a physiological pH. Because prolactin controls the vesicular traff...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Endocrinology
Main Authors: Castino, Roberta, Delpal, Serge, Bouguyon, Edwige, Demoz, Marina, Isidoro, Ciro, Ollivier-Bousquet, Michele
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: 2008
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Online Access:http://prodinra.inra.fr/ft/54123227-2145-4BBA-A096-88934C3F797E
http://prodinra.inra.fr/record/37471
https://doi.org/10.1210/en.2008-0249
Description
Summary:Cathepsin D (CD), a lysosomal aspartic protease present in mammary tissue and milk in various molecular forms, is also found in the incubation medium of mammary acini in molecular forms that are proteolytically active on prolactin at a physiological pH. Because prolactin controls the vesicular traffic in mammary cells, we studied, in vivo and in vitro, its effects on the polarized transport and secretion of various forms of CD in the rat mammary gland. CD accumulated in vesicles not involved in endocytosis in the basal region of cells. Prolactin increased this accumulation and the release of endosomal active single-chain CD at the basal side of acini. The CD-mediated proteolysis of prolactin, leading to the antiangiogenic 16-kDa form, at a physiological pH, was observed only in conditioned medium but not milk. These data support the novel concept that an active molecular form of CD, secreted at the basal side of the mammary epithelium, participates in processing blood-borne prolactin outside the cell, this polarized secretion being controlled by prolactin itself.