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The genomic landscape associated with resistance to aromatase inhibitors in breast cancer

Aromatase inhibitors (AI) are drugs that are widely used in treating estrogen receptor (ER)–positive breast cancer patients. Drug resistance is a major obstacle to aromatase inhibition therapy. There are diverse reasons behind acquired AI resistance. This study aims at identifying the plausible caus...

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Autores principales: Sadasivam, Kirithika, Manoharan, Jeevitha Priya, Palanisamy, Hema, Vidyalakshmi, Subramanian
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Korea Genome Organization 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10326531/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37415453
http://dx.doi.org/10.5808/gi.23012
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author Sadasivam, Kirithika
Manoharan, Jeevitha Priya
Palanisamy, Hema
Vidyalakshmi, Subramanian
author_facet Sadasivam, Kirithika
Manoharan, Jeevitha Priya
Palanisamy, Hema
Vidyalakshmi, Subramanian
author_sort Sadasivam, Kirithika
collection PubMed
description Aromatase inhibitors (AI) are drugs that are widely used in treating estrogen receptor (ER)–positive breast cancer patients. Drug resistance is a major obstacle to aromatase inhibition therapy. There are diverse reasons behind acquired AI resistance. This study aims at identifying the plausible cause of acquired AI resistance in patients administered with non-steroidal AIs (anastrozole and letrozole). We used genomic, transcriptomic, epigenetic, and mutation data of breast invasive carcinoma from The Cancer Genomic Atlas database. The data was then separated into sensitive and resistant sets based on patients’ responsiveness to the non-steroidal AIs. A sensitive set of 150 patients and a resistant set of 172 patients were included for the study. These data were collectively analyzed to probe into the factors that might be responsible for AI resistance. We identified 17 differentially regulated genes (DEGs) among the two groups. Then, methylation, mutation, miRNA, copy number variation, and pathway analyses were performed for these DEGs. The top mutated genes (FGFR3, CDKN2A, RNF208, MAPK4, MAPK15, HSD3B1, CRYBB2, CDC20B, TP53TG5, and MAPK8IP3) were predicted. We also identified a key miRNA - hsa-mir-1264 regulating the expression of CDC20B. Pathway analysis revealed HSD3B1 to be involved in estrogen biosynthesis. This study reveals the involvement of key genes that might be associated with the development of AI resistance in ER-positive breast cancers and hence may act as a potential prognostic and diagnostic biomarker for these patients.
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spelling pubmed-103265312023-07-08 The genomic landscape associated with resistance to aromatase inhibitors in breast cancer Sadasivam, Kirithika Manoharan, Jeevitha Priya Palanisamy, Hema Vidyalakshmi, Subramanian Genomics Inform Original Article Aromatase inhibitors (AI) are drugs that are widely used in treating estrogen receptor (ER)–positive breast cancer patients. Drug resistance is a major obstacle to aromatase inhibition therapy. There are diverse reasons behind acquired AI resistance. This study aims at identifying the plausible cause of acquired AI resistance in patients administered with non-steroidal AIs (anastrozole and letrozole). We used genomic, transcriptomic, epigenetic, and mutation data of breast invasive carcinoma from The Cancer Genomic Atlas database. The data was then separated into sensitive and resistant sets based on patients’ responsiveness to the non-steroidal AIs. A sensitive set of 150 patients and a resistant set of 172 patients were included for the study. These data were collectively analyzed to probe into the factors that might be responsible for AI resistance. We identified 17 differentially regulated genes (DEGs) among the two groups. Then, methylation, mutation, miRNA, copy number variation, and pathway analyses were performed for these DEGs. The top mutated genes (FGFR3, CDKN2A, RNF208, MAPK4, MAPK15, HSD3B1, CRYBB2, CDC20B, TP53TG5, and MAPK8IP3) were predicted. We also identified a key miRNA - hsa-mir-1264 regulating the expression of CDC20B. Pathway analysis revealed HSD3B1 to be involved in estrogen biosynthesis. This study reveals the involvement of key genes that might be associated with the development of AI resistance in ER-positive breast cancers and hence may act as a potential prognostic and diagnostic biomarker for these patients. Korea Genome Organization 2023-06-30 /pmc/articles/PMC10326531/ /pubmed/37415453 http://dx.doi.org/10.5808/gi.23012 Text en (c) 2023, Korea Genome Organization https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/(CC) This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution license(https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Original Article
Sadasivam, Kirithika
Manoharan, Jeevitha Priya
Palanisamy, Hema
Vidyalakshmi, Subramanian
The genomic landscape associated with resistance to aromatase inhibitors in breast cancer
title The genomic landscape associated with resistance to aromatase inhibitors in breast cancer
title_full The genomic landscape associated with resistance to aromatase inhibitors in breast cancer
title_fullStr The genomic landscape associated with resistance to aromatase inhibitors in breast cancer
title_full_unstemmed The genomic landscape associated with resistance to aromatase inhibitors in breast cancer
title_short The genomic landscape associated with resistance to aromatase inhibitors in breast cancer
title_sort genomic landscape associated with resistance to aromatase inhibitors in breast cancer
topic Original Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10326531/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37415453
http://dx.doi.org/10.5808/gi.23012
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