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Identification of Functional Networks of Estrogen- and c-Myc-Responsive Genes and Their Relationship to Response to Tamoxifen Therapy in Breast Cancer

BACKGROUND: Estrogen is a pivotal regulator of cell proliferation in the normal breast and breast cancer. Endocrine therapies targeting the estrogen receptor are effective in breast cancer, but their success is limited by intrinsic and acquired resistance. METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: With the go...

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Autores principales: Musgrove, Elizabeth A., Sergio, C. Marcelo, Loi, Sherene, Inman, Claire K., Anderson, Luke R., Alles, M. Chehani, Pinese, Mark, Caldon, C. Elizabeth, Schütte, Judith, Gardiner-Garden, Margaret, Ormandy, Christopher J., McArthur, Grant, Butt, Alison J., Sutherland, Robert L.
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2008
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2496892/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/18714337
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0002987
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author Musgrove, Elizabeth A.
Sergio, C. Marcelo
Loi, Sherene
Inman, Claire K.
Anderson, Luke R.
Alles, M. Chehani
Pinese, Mark
Caldon, C. Elizabeth
Schütte, Judith
Gardiner-Garden, Margaret
Ormandy, Christopher J.
McArthur, Grant
Butt, Alison J.
Sutherland, Robert L.
author_facet Musgrove, Elizabeth A.
Sergio, C. Marcelo
Loi, Sherene
Inman, Claire K.
Anderson, Luke R.
Alles, M. Chehani
Pinese, Mark
Caldon, C. Elizabeth
Schütte, Judith
Gardiner-Garden, Margaret
Ormandy, Christopher J.
McArthur, Grant
Butt, Alison J.
Sutherland, Robert L.
author_sort Musgrove, Elizabeth A.
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Estrogen is a pivotal regulator of cell proliferation in the normal breast and breast cancer. Endocrine therapies targeting the estrogen receptor are effective in breast cancer, but their success is limited by intrinsic and acquired resistance. METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: With the goal of gaining mechanistic insights into estrogen action and endocrine resistance, we classified estrogen-regulated genes by function, and determined the relationship between functionally-related genesets and the response to tamoxifen in breast cancer patients. Estrogen-responsive genes were identified by transcript profiling of MCF-7 breast cancer cells. Pathway analysis based on functional annotation of these estrogen-regulated genes identified gene signatures with known or predicted roles in cell cycle control, cell growth (i.e. ribosome biogenesis and protein synthesis), cell death/survival signaling and transcriptional regulation. Since inducible expression of c-Myc in antiestrogen-arrested cells can recapitulate many of the effects of estrogen on molecular endpoints related to cell cycle progression, the estrogen-regulated genes that were also targets of c-Myc were identified using cells inducibly expressing c-Myc. Selected genes classified as estrogen and c-Myc targets displayed similar levels of regulation by estrogen and c-Myc and were not estrogen-regulated in the presence of siMyc. Genes regulated by c-Myc accounted for 50% of all acutely estrogen-regulated genes but comprised 85% (110/129 genes) in the cell growth signature. siRNA-mediated inhibition of c-Myc induction impaired estrogen regulation of ribosome biogenesis and protein synthesis, consistent with the prediction that estrogen regulates cell growth principally via c-Myc. The ‘cell cycle’, ‘cell growth’ and ‘cell death’ gene signatures each identified patients with an attenuated response in a cohort of 246 tamoxifen-treated patients. In multivariate analysis the cell death signature was predictive independent of the cell cycle and cell growth signatures. CONCLUSIONS/SIGNIFICANCE: These functionally-based gene signatures can stratify patients treated with tamoxifen into groups with differing outcome, and potentially identify distinct mechanisms of tamoxifen resistance.
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spelling pubmed-24968922008-08-20 Identification of Functional Networks of Estrogen- and c-Myc-Responsive Genes and Their Relationship to Response to Tamoxifen Therapy in Breast Cancer Musgrove, Elizabeth A. Sergio, C. Marcelo Loi, Sherene Inman, Claire K. Anderson, Luke R. Alles, M. Chehani Pinese, Mark Caldon, C. Elizabeth Schütte, Judith Gardiner-Garden, Margaret Ormandy, Christopher J. McArthur, Grant Butt, Alison J. Sutherland, Robert L. PLoS One Research Article BACKGROUND: Estrogen is a pivotal regulator of cell proliferation in the normal breast and breast cancer. Endocrine therapies targeting the estrogen receptor are effective in breast cancer, but their success is limited by intrinsic and acquired resistance. METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: With the goal of gaining mechanistic insights into estrogen action and endocrine resistance, we classified estrogen-regulated genes by function, and determined the relationship between functionally-related genesets and the response to tamoxifen in breast cancer patients. Estrogen-responsive genes were identified by transcript profiling of MCF-7 breast cancer cells. Pathway analysis based on functional annotation of these estrogen-regulated genes identified gene signatures with known or predicted roles in cell cycle control, cell growth (i.e. ribosome biogenesis and protein synthesis), cell death/survival signaling and transcriptional regulation. Since inducible expression of c-Myc in antiestrogen-arrested cells can recapitulate many of the effects of estrogen on molecular endpoints related to cell cycle progression, the estrogen-regulated genes that were also targets of c-Myc were identified using cells inducibly expressing c-Myc. Selected genes classified as estrogen and c-Myc targets displayed similar levels of regulation by estrogen and c-Myc and were not estrogen-regulated in the presence of siMyc. Genes regulated by c-Myc accounted for 50% of all acutely estrogen-regulated genes but comprised 85% (110/129 genes) in the cell growth signature. siRNA-mediated inhibition of c-Myc induction impaired estrogen regulation of ribosome biogenesis and protein synthesis, consistent with the prediction that estrogen regulates cell growth principally via c-Myc. The ‘cell cycle’, ‘cell growth’ and ‘cell death’ gene signatures each identified patients with an attenuated response in a cohort of 246 tamoxifen-treated patients. In multivariate analysis the cell death signature was predictive independent of the cell cycle and cell growth signatures. CONCLUSIONS/SIGNIFICANCE: These functionally-based gene signatures can stratify patients treated with tamoxifen into groups with differing outcome, and potentially identify distinct mechanisms of tamoxifen resistance. Public Library of Science 2008-08-20 /pmc/articles/PMC2496892/ /pubmed/18714337 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0002987 Text en Musgrove et al. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Musgrove, Elizabeth A.
Sergio, C. Marcelo
Loi, Sherene
Inman, Claire K.
Anderson, Luke R.
Alles, M. Chehani
Pinese, Mark
Caldon, C. Elizabeth
Schütte, Judith
Gardiner-Garden, Margaret
Ormandy, Christopher J.
McArthur, Grant
Butt, Alison J.
Sutherland, Robert L.
Identification of Functional Networks of Estrogen- and c-Myc-Responsive Genes and Their Relationship to Response to Tamoxifen Therapy in Breast Cancer
title Identification of Functional Networks of Estrogen- and c-Myc-Responsive Genes and Their Relationship to Response to Tamoxifen Therapy in Breast Cancer
title_full Identification of Functional Networks of Estrogen- and c-Myc-Responsive Genes and Their Relationship to Response to Tamoxifen Therapy in Breast Cancer
title_fullStr Identification of Functional Networks of Estrogen- and c-Myc-Responsive Genes and Their Relationship to Response to Tamoxifen Therapy in Breast Cancer
title_full_unstemmed Identification of Functional Networks of Estrogen- and c-Myc-Responsive Genes and Their Relationship to Response to Tamoxifen Therapy in Breast Cancer
title_short Identification of Functional Networks of Estrogen- and c-Myc-Responsive Genes and Their Relationship to Response to Tamoxifen Therapy in Breast Cancer
title_sort identification of functional networks of estrogen- and c-myc-responsive genes and their relationship to response to tamoxifen therapy in breast cancer
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2496892/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/18714337
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0002987
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