4.6 Article

Adaptive stress response genes associated with breast cancer subtypes and survival outcomes reveal race-related differences

Journal

NPJ BREAST CANCER
Volume 8, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

NATURE PORTFOLIO
DOI: 10.1038/s41523-022-00431-z

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Funding

  1. Duke School of Medicine Bridge Award
  2. NCI-P20 NCCU-Duke Cancer Disparities Translational Research Partnership
  3. NCI-P20 Project 2
  4. NCI-P20 Predoctoral Diversity Supplement [3P20CA202925-04S2]
  5. Department of Defense Breast Cancer Breakthrough level 2 Award [W81XWH-17-1-0297]
  6. NCI of NIH Award [R01CA264529]
  7. IBC Network Foundation Gift
  8. NIH Basic Research in Cancer Health Disparities R01 Award [R01CA220314]
  9. Prostate Cancer Foundation Movember Challenge Award [18CHAL04]

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The study identified differential expression of ASR genes in aggressive breast cancer variants among different breast cancer subtypes, which were associated with the survival of African American and White breast cancer patients.
Aggressive breast cancer variants, like triple negative and inflammatory breast cancer, contribute to disparities in survival and clinical outcomes among African American (AA) patients compared to White (W) patients. We previously identified the dominant role of anti-apoptotic protein XIAP in regulating tumor cell adaptive stress response (ASR) that promotes a hyperproliferative, drug resistant phenotype. Using The Cancer Genome Atlas (TCGA), we identified 46-88 ASR genes that are differentially expressed (2-fold-change and adjusted p-value < 0.05) depending on PAM50 breast cancer subtype. On average, 20% of all 226 ASR genes exhibited race-related differential expression. These genes were functionally relevant in cell cycle, DNA damage response, signal transduction, and regulation of cell death-related processes. Moreover, 23% of the differentially expressed ASR genes were associated with AA and/or W breast cancer patient survival. These identified genes represent potential therapeutic targets to improve breast cancer outcomes and mitigate associated health disparities.

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