4.7 Article

Aberrant activation of five embryonic stem cell-specific genes robustly predicts a high risk of relapse in breast cancers

Journal

BMC GENOMICS
Volume 24, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

BMC
DOI: 10.1186/s12864-023-09571-3

Keywords

Cancer; testis antigens; Breast cancer; Ectopic expression; Survival analysis; Prognosis biomarkers

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This study identified five biomarkers that are predictive of disease-free survival in breast cancer patients, using an unbiased analysis of tissue-specific gene activations. Based on these findings, a Gene Expression Classifier was created, which can stratify and predict outcomes for breast cancer patients.
BackgroundIn breast cancer, as in all cancers, genetic and epigenetic deregulations can result in out-of-context expressions of a set of normally silent tissue-specific genes. The activation of some of these genes in various cancers empowers tumours cells with new properties and drives enhanced proliferation and metastatic activity, leading to a poor survival prognosis.ResultsIn this work, we undertook an unprecedented systematic and unbiased analysis of out-of-context activations of a specific set of tissue-specific genes from testis, placenta and embryonic stem cells, not expressed in normal breast tissue as a source of novel prognostic biomarkers. To this end, we combined a strict machine learning framework of transcriptomic data analysis, and successfully created a new robust tool, validated in several independent datasets, which is able to identify patients with a high risk of relapse. This unbiased approach allowed us to identify a panel of five biomarkers, DNMT3B, EXO1, MCM10, CENPF and CENPE, that are robustly and significantly associated with disease-free survival prognosis in breast cancer. Based on these findings, we created a new Gene Expression Classifier (GEC) that stratifies patients. Additionally, thanks to the identified GEC, we were able to paint the specific molecular portraits of the particularly aggressive tumours, which show characteristics of male germ cells, with a particular metabolic gene signature, associated with an enrichment in pro-metastatic and pro-proliferation gene expression.ConclusionsThe GEC classifier is able to reliably identify patients with a high risk of relapse at early stages of the disease. We especially recommend to use the GEC tool for patients with the luminal-A molecular subtype of breast cancer, generally considered of a favourable disease-free survival prognosis, to detect the fraction of patients undergoing a high risk of relapse.

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