AI Article Synopsis

  • Breast cancer has distinct subtypes that show similar DNA copy number alterations (CNA), revealing potential ways to classify and understand these tumors better.
  • Researchers used a new method, SWITCHdna, to analyze CNA in 180 training tumors and 359 validation tumors, employing various statistical tests to find differences by subtype.
  • The Basal-like subtype was particularly notable for its genomic instability and losses of key DNA repair genes, which were linked to poor patient outcomes and increased sensitivity to certain cancer therapies, highlighting a potential target for treatment.

Article Abstract

Breast cancer is a heterogeneous disease with known expression-defined tumor subtypes. DNA copy number studies have suggested that tumors within gene expression subtypes share similar DNA Copy number aberrations (CNA) and that CNA can be used to further sub-divide expression classes. To gain further insights into the etiologies of the intrinsic subtypes, we classified tumors according to gene expression subtype and next identified subtype-associated CNA using a novel method called SWITCHdna, using a training set of 180 tumors and a validation set of 359 tumors. Fisher's exact tests, Chi-square approximations, and Wilcoxon rank-sum tests were performed to evaluate differences in CNA by subtype. To assess the functional significance of loss of a specific chromosomal region, individual genes were knocked down by shRNA and drug sensitivity, and DNA repair foci assays performed. Most tumor subtypes exhibited specific CNA. The Basal-like subtype was the most distinct with common losses of the regions containing RB1, BRCA1, INPP4B, and the greatest overall genomic instability. One Basal-like subtype-associated CNA was loss of 5q11-35, which contains at least three genes important for BRCA1-dependent DNA repair (RAD17, RAD50, and RAP80); these genes were predominantly lost as a pair, or all three simultaneously. Loss of two or three of these genes was associated with significantly increased genomic instability and poor patient survival. RNAi knockdown of RAD17, or RAD17/RAD50, in immortalized human mammary epithelial cell lines caused increased sensitivity to a PARP inhibitor and carboplatin, and inhibited BRCA1 foci formation in response to DNA damage. These data suggest a possible genetic cause for genomic instability in Basal-like breast cancers and a biological rationale for the use of DNA repair inhibitor related therapeutics in this breast cancer subtype.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3387500PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10549-011-1846-yDOI Listing

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