4.7 Article

Expression of the transcription factor CTCF in invasive breast cancer: a candidate gene located at 16q22.1

Journal

BRITISH JOURNAL OF CANCER
Volume 91, Issue 8, Pages 1591-1596

Publisher

NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1038/sj.bjc.6602144

Keywords

breast cancer; chromosome 16; CTCF; immunohistochemistry

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CTCF is a ubiquitous 11-zinc-finger protein that plays a role in gene silencing or activation, chromatin insulation and genomic imprinting. The CTCF gene has been mapped to the chromosome band 16q22.1 that shows frequent loss of heterozygosity in breast cancer. The E-cadherin gene is the known tumour suppressor gene (TSG) at this region in lobular carcinomas; however, the target gene in the more frequent ductal tumours is still unknown. Since CTCF targets include TSGs and oncogenes and it has the ability to inhibit cell growth and proliferation, it has been suggested that it may be the target gene at the 16q22.1 in ductal carcinomas. In the present study, tissue microarray technology was used to study the expression pattern of CTCF immunohistochemically in 344 cases of invasive breast carcinoma and its expression was correlated with clinicopathological variables and patient outcome. Results showed that breast tissues express CTCF in the parenchymal cells of the normal ducts and lobules but with a variable percentage of positive cells. Staining of CTCF was detected in the nuclei and cytoplasm of the malignant cells, but no significant loss or decrease of expression was noticed in association with any specific tumour type. There was a significant correlation between expression of CTCF and histological grades; lower expression was associated with grade 3 tumours. Cytoplasmic expression was associated with increased tumour size and with the presence of vascular invasion. However, no association was found between CTCF expression and tumour type, lymph node stage, oestrogen receptor expression or patient outcome. In conclusion, the current results show that CTCF, although it may play a role in breast carcinogenesis, is unlikely to be the TSG targeted by the 16q22.1 loss in breast cancer and thus another gene or genes at this region remain to be identified.

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