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Dive into the research topics where Martha R. Stampfer is active.

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Featured researches published by Martha R. Stampfer.


Virology | 1970

Ribonucleic acid synthesis of vesicular stomatitis virus: III. Multiple complementary messenger RNA molecules☆

Alice S. Huang; David Baltimore; Martha R. Stampfer

Abstract Infection of Chinese hamster ovary cells by vesicular stomatitis virus (VSV), in the absence of any detectable interference by defective particles, leads to a replacement of host polyribosomes by a distinct class of smaller polyribosomes. These small polyribosomes synthesize only virus-specific polypeptides and are as active in protein synthesis as polyribosomes from uninfected cells. The 28 S and 13 S single-stranded RNA species made during viral replication are associated with the viral polyribosomes after separation of the polyribosomes by rate zonal and isopycnic centrifugations. Release of the 28 S and 13 S RNA species from polyribosomes by EDTA and hybridization of these RNA species to virion RNA shows that they have nucleotide sequences which are complementary to those of the virion RNA. The finding of multiple pieces of messenger RNA, all smaller than 40 S virion RNA, suggests that VSV polypeptides are synthesized from individual molecules of RNA, rather than from one large messenger RNA. These studies also demonstrate the presence of newly synthesized nucleocapsid-like structures which contain heterogeneous 28–40 S RNA.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2001

Expression of the telomerase catalytic subunit, hTERT, induces resistance to transforming growth factor beta growth inhibition in p16INK4A(-) human mammary epithelial cells.

Martha R. Stampfer; James C. Garbe; Gerri Levine; Serge Lichtsteiner; Alain P. Vasserot; Paul Yaswen

Failures to arrest growth in response to senescence or transforming growth factor β (TGF-β) are key derangements associated with carcinoma progression. We report that activation of telomerase activity may overcome both inhibitory pathways. Ectopic expression of the human telomerase catalytic subunit, hTERT, in cultured human mammary epithelial cells (HMEC) lacking both telomerase activity and p16INK4A resulted in gaining the ability to maintain indefinite growth in the absence and presence of TGF-β. The ability to maintain growth in TGF-β was independent of telomere length and required catalytically active telomerase capable of telomere maintenance in vivo. The capacity of ectopic hTERT to induce TGF-β resistance may explain our previously described gain of TGF-β resistance after reactivation of endogenous telomerase activity in rare carcinogen-treated HMEC. In those HMEC that overcame senescence, both telomerase activity and TGF-β resistance were acquired gradually during a process we have termed conversion. This effect of hTERT may model a key change occurring during in vivo human breast carcinogenesis.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2011

Self-organization is a dynamic and lineage-intrinsic property of mammary epithelial cells

Lea Chanson; Douglas G. Brownfield; James C. Garbe; Irene Kuhn; Martha R. Stampfer; Mina J. Bissell; Mark A. LaBarge

Loss of organization is a principle feature of cancers; therefore it is important to understand how normal adult multilineage tissues, such as bilayered secretory epithelia, establish and maintain their architectures. The self-organization process that drives heterogeneous mixtures of cells to form organized tissues is well studied in embryology and with mammalian cell lines that were abnormal or engineered. Here we used a micropatterning approach that confined cells to a cylindrical geometry combined with an algorithm to quantify changes of cellular distribution over time to measure the ability of different cell types to self-organize relative to each other. Using normal human mammary epithelial cells enriched into pools of the two principal lineages, luminal and myoepithelial cells, we demonstrated that bilayered organization in mammary epithelium was driven mainly by lineage-specific differential E-cadherin expression, but that P-cadherin contributed specifically to organization of the myoepithelial layer. Disruption of the actomyosin network or of adherens junction proteins resulted in either prevention of bilayer formation or loss of preformed bilayers, consistent with continual sampling of the local microenvironment by cadherins. Together these data show that self-organization is an innate and reversible property of communities of normal adult human mammary epithelial cells.


Oncogene | 2005

Accumulation and altered localization of telomere-associated protein TRF2 in immortally transformed and tumor-derived human breast cells.

Tarlochan Nijjar; Ekaterina Bassett; James C. Garbe; Yasuhiro Takenaka; Martha R. Stampfer; David Gilley; Paul Yaswen

We have used cultured human mammary epithelial cells (HMEC) and breast tumor-derived lines to gain information on defects that occur during breast cancer progression. HMEC immortalized by a variety of agents (the chemical carcinogen benzo(a)pyrene, oncogenes c-myc and ZNF217, and/or dominant negative p53 genetic suppressor element GSE22) displayed marked upregulation (10–15 fold) of the telomere-binding protein, TRF2. Upregulation of TRF2 protein was apparently due to differences in post-transcriptional regulation, as mRNA levels remained comparable in finite lifespan and immortal HMEC. TRF2 protein was not upregulated by the oncogenic agents alone in the absence of immortalization, nor by expression of exogenously introduced hTERT genes. We found TRF2 levels to be at least twofold higher than in control cells in 11/15 breast tumor cell lines, suggesting that elevated TRF2 levels are a frequent occurrence during the transformation of breast tumor cells in vivo. The dispersed distribution of TRF2 throughout the nuclei in some immortalized and tumor-derived cells indicated that not all the TRF2 was associated with telomeres in these cells. The process responsible for accumulation of TRF2 in immortalized HMEC and breast tumor-derived cell lines may promote tumorigenesis by contributing to the cells’ ability to maintain an indefinite lifespan.


Radiation Research | 2008

Karyotypic Instability and Centrosome Aberrations in the Progeny of Finite Life-Span Human Mammary Epithelial Cells Exposed to Sparsely or Densely Ionizing Radiation

Hiroko Sudo; James C. Garbe; Martha R. Stampfer; Mary Helen Barcellos-Hoff; Amy Kronenberg

Abstract Sudo, H., Garbe, J., Stampfer, M. R., Barcellos-Hoff, M. H. and Kronenberg, A. Karyotypic Instability and Centrosome Aberrations in the Progeny of Finite Life-Span Human Mammary Epithelial Cells Exposed to Sparsely or Densely Ionizing Radiation. Radiat. Res. 170, 23–32 (2008). The human breast is sensitive to radiation carcinogenesis, and genomic instability occurs early in breast cancer development. This study tests the hypothesis that ionizing radiation elicits genomic instability in finite life-span human mammary epithelial cells (HMEC) and asks whether densely ionizing radiation is a more potent inducer of instability. HMEC in a non-proliferative state were exposed to X rays or 1 GeV/nucleon iron ions followed by delayed plating. Karyotypic instability and centrosome aberrations were monitored in expanded clonal isolates. Severe karyotypic instability was common in the progeny of cells that survived X-ray or iron-ion exposure. There was a lower dose threshold for severe karyotypic instability after iron-ion exposure. More than 90% of X-irradiated colonies and >60% of iron-ion-irradiated colonies showed supernumerary centrosomes at levels above the 95% upper confidence limit of the mean for unirradiated clones. A dose response was observed for centrosome aberrations for each radiation type. There was a statistically significant association between the incidence of karyotypic instability and supernumerary centrosomes for iron-ion-exposed colonies and a weaker association for X-irradiated colonies. Thus genomic instability occurs frequently in finite life-span HMEC exposed to sparsely or densely ionizing radiation and may contribute to radiation-induced breast cancer.


Journal of Visualized Experiments | 2013

Processing of Human Reduction Mammoplasty and Mastectomy Tissues for Cell Culture

Mark A. LaBarge; James C. Garbe; Martha R. Stampfer

Experimental examination of normal human mammary epithelial cell (HMEC) behavior, and how normal cells acquire abnormal properties, can be facilitated by in vitro culture systems that more accurately model in vivo biology. The use of human derived material for studying cellular differentiation, aging, senescence, and immortalization is particularly advantageous given the many significant molecular differences in these properties between human and commonly utilized rodent cells1-2. Mammary cells present a convenient model system because large quantities of normal and abnormal tissues are available due to the frequency of reduction mammoplasty and mastectomy surgeries. The mammary gland consists of a complex admixture of many distinct cell types, e.g., epithelial, adipose, mesenchymal, endothelial. The epithelial cells are responsible for the differentiated mammary function of lactation, and are also the origin of the vast majority of human breast cancers. We have developed methods to process mammary gland surgical discard tissues into pure epithelial components as well as mesenchymal cells3. The processed material can be stored frozen indefinitely, or initiated into primary culture. Surgical discard material is transported to the laboratory and manually dissected to enrich for epithelial containing tissue. Subsequent digestion of the dissected tissue using collagenase and hyaluronidase strips stromal material from the epithelia at the basement membrane. The resulting small pieces of the epithelial tree (organoids) can be separated from the digested stroma by sequential filtration on membranes of fixed pore size. Depending upon pore size, fractions can be obtained consisting of larger ductal/alveolar pieces, smaller alveolar clusters, or stromal cells. We have observed superior growth when cultures are initiated as organoids rather than as dissociated single cells. Placement of organoids in culture using low-stress inducing media supports long-term growth of normal HMEC with markers of multiple lineage types (myoepithelial, luminal, progenitor)4-5. Sufficient numbers of cells can be obtained from one individuals tissue to allow extensive experimental examination using standardized cell batches, as well as interrogation using high throughput modalities. Cultured HMEC have been employed in a wide variety of studies examining the normal processes governing growth, differentiation, aging, and senescence, and how these normal processes are altered during immortal and malignant transformation4-15,16. The effects of growth in the presence of extracellular matrix material, other cell types, and/or 3D culture can be compared with growth on plastic5,15. Cultured HMEC, starting with normal cells, provide an experimentally tractable system to examine factors that may propel or prevent human aging and carcinogenesis.


Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications | 1972

Complementarity between messenger RNA and nuclear RNA from HeLa cells

Martha R. Stampfer; Michael Rosbash; Alice S. Huang; David Baltimore

Abstract Hybridization of labeled HeLa cell messenger RNA to HeLa cell nuclear RNA occurs as determined by ribonuclease resistance of annealed mixtures of the two RNAs. Hybrids were characterized by melting temperature and by centrifugation to equilibrium in Cs 2 SO 4 gradients. No annealing to nucleolar RNA, f2 phage RNA or homopolymers, was detected. The apparent complementarity of nuclear RNA and messenger RNA probably reflects an aspect of messenger RNA synthesis.


Aging | 2017

Age-related gene expression in luminal epithelial cells is driven by a microenvironment made from myoepithelial cells

Masaru Miyano; Rosalyn W. Sayaman; Marcus H. Stoiber; Chun-Han Lin; Martha R. Stampfer; James B. Brown; Mark A. LaBarge

Luminal epithelial cells in the breast gradually alter gene and protein expression with age, appearing to lose lineage-specificity by acquiring myoepithelial-like characteristics. We hypothesize that the luminal lineage is particularly sensitive to microenvironment changes, and age-related microenvironment changes cause altered luminal cell phenotypes. To evaluate the effects of different microenvironments on the fidelity of epigenetically regulated luminal and myoepithelial gene expression, we generated a set of lineage-specific probes for genes that are controlled through DNA methylation. Culturing primary luminal cells under conditions that favor myoepithelial propogation led to their reprogramming at the level of gene methylation, and to a more myoepithelial-like expression profile. Primary luminal cells’ lineage-specific gene expression could be maintained when they were cultured as bilayers with primary myoepithelial cells. Isogenic stromal fibroblast co-cultures were unable to maintain the luminal phenotype. Mixed-age luminal-myoepithelial bilayers revealed that luminal cells adopt transcription and methylation patterns consistent with the chronological age of the myoepithelial cells. We provide evidence that the luminal epithelial phenotype is exquisitely sensitive to microenvironment conditions, and that states of aging are cell non-autonomously communicated through microenvironment cues over at least one cell diameter.


PLOS ONE | 2018

Different culture media modulate growth, heterogeneity, and senescence in human mammary epithelial cell cultures

Jonathan K. Lee; Jessica Bloom; Arantzazu Zubeldia-Plazaola; James C. Garbe; Martha R. Stampfer; Mark A. LaBarge

The ability to culture normal human mammary epithelial cells (HMEC) greatly facilitates experiments that seek to understand both normal mammary cell biology and the many differences between normal and abnormal human mammary epithelia. To maximize in vivo relevance, the primary cell culture conditions should maintain cells in states that resemble in vivo as much as possible. Towards this goal, we compared the properties of HMEC strains from two different reduction mammoplasty tissues that were grown in parallel using different media and culture conditions. Epithelial organoids were initiated into three different media: two commonly used serum-free-media, MCDB 170-type (e.g. MEGM) and WIT-P, and a low stress media, M87A. Growth, lineage heterogeneity, p16 protein expression, and population doublings to senescence were measured for each culture condition. MCDB 170 caused rapid senescence and loss of heterogeneity within 2 to 3 passages, but some cultures went through the 1 to 2 month process of selection to generate clonal finite post-selection post-stasis cells. WIT-P caused impressive expansion of luminal cells in 2nd passage followed by their near complete disappearance by passage 4 and senescence shortly thereafter. M87A supported as much as twice the number of population doublings compared to either serum-free medium, and luminal and myoepithelial cells were present for as many as 8 passages. Thus, of the three media compared, WIT-P and MCDB 170 imposed rapid senescence and loss of lineage heterogeneity, phenotypes consistent with cells maintained in high-stress conditions, while M87A supported cultures that maintained multiple lineages and robust growth for up to 60 population doublings. In conjunction with previous studies examining the molecular properties of cultures grown in these media, we conclude that M87A medium is most able to support long-term culture of multiple lineages similar to in vivo conditions, thereby facilitating investigations of normal HMEC biology relevant to the mammary gland in situ.


Life sciences in space research | 2018

Genetic Variation and Radiation Quality Impact Cancer Promoting Cellular Phenotypes in Response to HZE exposure

Deepa Sridharan; Shiena Enerio; Chris Wang; Mark A. LaBarge; Martha R. Stampfer; Janice M. Pluth

There exists a wide degree of genetic variation within the normal human population which includes disease free individuals with heterozygote defects in major DNA repair genes. A lack of understanding of how this genetic variation impacts cellular phenotypes that inform cancer risk post heavy ion exposure poses a major limitation in developing personalized cancer risk assessment astronauts. We initiated a pilot study with Human Mammary Epithelial Cell strains (HMEC) derived from wild type, a p16 silenced derivative of wild type, and various genetic variants that were heterozygote for DNA repair genes; BRCA1, BRCA2 and ATM. Cells strains were exposed to different high and low LET radiation qualities to generate both simple and complex lesions and centrosome aberrations were examined as a surrogate marker of genomic instability and cancer susceptibility post different exposures. Our results indicate that centrosome aberration frequency is higher in the genetic variants under study. The aberration frequency increases with dose, complexity of the lesion generated by different radiation qualities and age of the individual. This increase in genomic instability correlates with elevated check-point activation post radiation exposure. These studies suggest that the influence of individual genetics on cell cycle regulation could modify the degree of early genomic instability in response to complex lesions and potentially define cancer predisposition in response to HZE exposure. These results will have significant implications in estimating cancer susceptibility in genetically variant individuals exposed to HZE particles.

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David Baltimore

Albert Einstein College of Medicine

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James C. Garbe

Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory

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Mark A. LaBarge

City of Hope National Medical Center

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Alice S. Huang

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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Jack C. Bartley

Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory

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Ahmet Dirim Arslan

University of Illinois at Chicago

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Alice Huang

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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