4.7 Article

Breast cancer prognosis predicted by nuclear receptor-coregulator networks

Journal

MOLECULAR ONCOLOGY
Volume 8, Issue 5, Pages 998-1013

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1016/j.molonc.2014.03.017

Keywords

Breast; Nuclear receptors; Transcriptome; Prognosis; Gene signature

Categories

Funding

  1. National Breast Cancer Foundation Australia [CG-08-03]
  2. APA Scholarship
  3. Victorian Government's Operational Infrastructure Program
  4. National Health and Medical Research Council of Australia [633291]
  5. Cancer Institute NSW [12/RIG/1-16]
  6. National Breast Cancer Foundation [IF-12-05]
  7. Victorian Cancer BioBank Australia, Victorian Government
  8. National Breast Cancer Foundation [IF-12-05] Funding Source: researchfish

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Although molecular signatures based on transcript expression in breast cancer samples have provided new insights into breast cancer classification and prognosis, there are acknowledged limitations in current signatures. To provide rational, pathway-based signatures of disrupted physiology in cancer tissues that may be relevant to prognosis, this study has directly quantitated changed gene expression, between normal breast and cancer tissue, as a basis for signature development. The nuclear receptor (NR) family of transcription factors, and their coregulators, are fundamental regulators of every aspect of metazoan life, and were rigorously quantified in normal breast tissues and ER alpha positive and ER alpha negative breast cancers. Coregulator expression was highly correlated with that of selected NR in normal breast, particularly from postmenopausal women. These associations were markedly decreased in breast cancer, and the expression of the majority of coregulators was down-regulated in cancer tissues compared with normal. While in cancer the loss of NR-coregulator associations observed in normal breast was common, a small number of NR (Rev-ERBf3, GR, NOR1, LRH-1 and PGR) acquired new associations with coregulators in cancer tissues. Elevated expression of these NR in cancers was associated with poorer outcome in large clinical cohorts, as well as suggesting the activation of ER alpha-related, but ER alpha-independent, pathways in ER alpha negative cancers. In addition, the combined expression of small numbers of NR and coregulators in breast cancer was identified as a signature predicting outcome in ER alpha negative breast cancer patients, not linked to proliferation and with predictive power superior to existing signatures containing many more genes. These findings highlight the power of predictive signatures derived from the quantitative determination of altered gene expression between normal breast and breast cancers. Taken together, the findings of this study identify networks of NR-coregulator associations active in normal breast but disrupted in breast cancer, and moreover provide evidence that signatures based on NR networks disrupted in cancer can provide important prognostic information in breast cancer patients. (C) 2014 Federation of European Biochemical Societies. Published by Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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