Cargando…

Analysis of tumor environmental response and oncogenic pathway activation identifies distinct basal and luminal features in HER2-related breast tumor subtypes

INTRODUCTION: Breast cancer heterogeneity occurs as a consequence of the dysregulation of numerous oncogenic pathways as well as many non-genetic factors, including tumor microenvironmental stresses such as hypoxia, lactic acidosis, and glucose deprivation. Although the importance of these non-genet...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Gatza, Michael L, Kung, Hsiu-Ni, Blackwell, Kimberly L, Dewhirst, Mark W, Marks, Jeffrey R, Chi, Jen-Tsan
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2011
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3218951/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21672245
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/bcr2899
_version_ 1782216764820553728
author Gatza, Michael L
Kung, Hsiu-Ni
Blackwell, Kimberly L
Dewhirst, Mark W
Marks, Jeffrey R
Chi, Jen-Tsan
author_facet Gatza, Michael L
Kung, Hsiu-Ni
Blackwell, Kimberly L
Dewhirst, Mark W
Marks, Jeffrey R
Chi, Jen-Tsan
author_sort Gatza, Michael L
collection PubMed
description INTRODUCTION: Breast cancer heterogeneity occurs as a consequence of the dysregulation of numerous oncogenic pathways as well as many non-genetic factors, including tumor microenvironmental stresses such as hypoxia, lactic acidosis, and glucose deprivation. Although the importance of these non-genetic factors is well recognized, it is not clear how to integrate these factors within the genetic framework of cancer as the next logical step in understanding tumor heterogeneity. METHODS: We report here the development of a series of gene expression signatures to measure the influences of microenvironmental stresses. The pathway activities of hypoxia, lactic acidosis, acidosis and glucose deprivation were investigated in a collection of 1,143 breast tumors, which have been separated into 17 breast tumor subgroups defined by their distinct patterns of oncogenic pathways. A validation dataset comprised of 547 breast tumors was also used to confirm the major findings, and representative breast cancer cell lines were utilized to validate in silico results and mechanistic studies. RESULTS: Through the integrative pathway analysis of microenvironmental stresses and oncogenic events in breast tumors, we identified many known and novel correlations between these two sources of tumor heterogeneity. Focusing on differences between two human epidermal growth factor receptor 2 (HER2)-related subgroups, previously identified based on patterns of oncogenic pathway activity, we determined that these subgroups differ with regards to tumor microenvironmental signatures, including hypoxia. We further demonstrate that each of these subgroups have features consistent with basal and luminal breast tumors including patterns of oncogenic signaling pathways, expression of subtype specific genes, and cellular mechanisms that regulate the hypoxia response. Importantly, we also demonstrate that the correlated pattern of hypoxia-related gene expression and basal-associated gene expression are consistent across HER2-related tumors whether we analyze the tumors as a function of our pathway-based classification scheme, using the intrinsic gene list (ERBB2+), or based on HER2 IHC status. Our results demonstrate a cell lineage-specific phenomenon in which basal-like tumors, HER2-related tumors with high hypoxia, as well as normal basal epithelial cells express increased mRNA levels of HIF-1α compared to luminal types and silencing of HIF-1α results in decreased expression of hypoxia-induced genes. CONCLUSIONS: This study demonstrates differences in microenvironmental conditions in HER2-related subgroups defined by distinct oncogenic pathway activities, and provides a mechanistic explanation for differences in the observed hypoxia response between these subgroups. Collectively, these data demonstrate the potential of a pathway-based classification strategy as a framework to integrate genetic and non-genetic factors to investigate the basis of tumor heterogeneity.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-3218951
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2011
publisher BioMed Central
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-32189512011-11-18 Analysis of tumor environmental response and oncogenic pathway activation identifies distinct basal and luminal features in HER2-related breast tumor subtypes Gatza, Michael L Kung, Hsiu-Ni Blackwell, Kimberly L Dewhirst, Mark W Marks, Jeffrey R Chi, Jen-Tsan Breast Cancer Res Research Article INTRODUCTION: Breast cancer heterogeneity occurs as a consequence of the dysregulation of numerous oncogenic pathways as well as many non-genetic factors, including tumor microenvironmental stresses such as hypoxia, lactic acidosis, and glucose deprivation. Although the importance of these non-genetic factors is well recognized, it is not clear how to integrate these factors within the genetic framework of cancer as the next logical step in understanding tumor heterogeneity. METHODS: We report here the development of a series of gene expression signatures to measure the influences of microenvironmental stresses. The pathway activities of hypoxia, lactic acidosis, acidosis and glucose deprivation were investigated in a collection of 1,143 breast tumors, which have been separated into 17 breast tumor subgroups defined by their distinct patterns of oncogenic pathways. A validation dataset comprised of 547 breast tumors was also used to confirm the major findings, and representative breast cancer cell lines were utilized to validate in silico results and mechanistic studies. RESULTS: Through the integrative pathway analysis of microenvironmental stresses and oncogenic events in breast tumors, we identified many known and novel correlations between these two sources of tumor heterogeneity. Focusing on differences between two human epidermal growth factor receptor 2 (HER2)-related subgroups, previously identified based on patterns of oncogenic pathway activity, we determined that these subgroups differ with regards to tumor microenvironmental signatures, including hypoxia. We further demonstrate that each of these subgroups have features consistent with basal and luminal breast tumors including patterns of oncogenic signaling pathways, expression of subtype specific genes, and cellular mechanisms that regulate the hypoxia response. Importantly, we also demonstrate that the correlated pattern of hypoxia-related gene expression and basal-associated gene expression are consistent across HER2-related tumors whether we analyze the tumors as a function of our pathway-based classification scheme, using the intrinsic gene list (ERBB2+), or based on HER2 IHC status. Our results demonstrate a cell lineage-specific phenomenon in which basal-like tumors, HER2-related tumors with high hypoxia, as well as normal basal epithelial cells express increased mRNA levels of HIF-1α compared to luminal types and silencing of HIF-1α results in decreased expression of hypoxia-induced genes. CONCLUSIONS: This study demonstrates differences in microenvironmental conditions in HER2-related subgroups defined by distinct oncogenic pathway activities, and provides a mechanistic explanation for differences in the observed hypoxia response between these subgroups. Collectively, these data demonstrate the potential of a pathway-based classification strategy as a framework to integrate genetic and non-genetic factors to investigate the basis of tumor heterogeneity. BioMed Central 2011 2011-06-07 /pmc/articles/PMC3218951/ /pubmed/21672245 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/bcr2899 Text en Copyright ©2011 Gatza et al.; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0 This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Gatza, Michael L
Kung, Hsiu-Ni
Blackwell, Kimberly L
Dewhirst, Mark W
Marks, Jeffrey R
Chi, Jen-Tsan
Analysis of tumor environmental response and oncogenic pathway activation identifies distinct basal and luminal features in HER2-related breast tumor subtypes
title Analysis of tumor environmental response and oncogenic pathway activation identifies distinct basal and luminal features in HER2-related breast tumor subtypes
title_full Analysis of tumor environmental response and oncogenic pathway activation identifies distinct basal and luminal features in HER2-related breast tumor subtypes
title_fullStr Analysis of tumor environmental response and oncogenic pathway activation identifies distinct basal and luminal features in HER2-related breast tumor subtypes
title_full_unstemmed Analysis of tumor environmental response and oncogenic pathway activation identifies distinct basal and luminal features in HER2-related breast tumor subtypes
title_short Analysis of tumor environmental response and oncogenic pathway activation identifies distinct basal and luminal features in HER2-related breast tumor subtypes
title_sort analysis of tumor environmental response and oncogenic pathway activation identifies distinct basal and luminal features in her2-related breast tumor subtypes
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3218951/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21672245
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/bcr2899
work_keys_str_mv AT gatzamichaell analysisoftumorenvironmentalresponseandoncogenicpathwayactivationidentifiesdistinctbasalandluminalfeaturesinher2relatedbreasttumorsubtypes
AT kunghsiuni analysisoftumorenvironmentalresponseandoncogenicpathwayactivationidentifiesdistinctbasalandluminalfeaturesinher2relatedbreasttumorsubtypes
AT blackwellkimberlyl analysisoftumorenvironmentalresponseandoncogenicpathwayactivationidentifiesdistinctbasalandluminalfeaturesinher2relatedbreasttumorsubtypes
AT dewhirstmarkw analysisoftumorenvironmentalresponseandoncogenicpathwayactivationidentifiesdistinctbasalandluminalfeaturesinher2relatedbreasttumorsubtypes
AT marksjeffreyr analysisoftumorenvironmentalresponseandoncogenicpathwayactivationidentifiesdistinctbasalandluminalfeaturesinher2relatedbreasttumorsubtypes
AT chijentsan analysisoftumorenvironmentalresponseandoncogenicpathwayactivationidentifiesdistinctbasalandluminalfeaturesinher2relatedbreasttumorsubtypes