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Interactions between immunity, proliferation and molecular subtype in breast cancer prognosis

BACKGROUND: Gene expression signatures indicative of tumor proliferative capacity and tumor-immune cell interactions have emerged as principal biology-driven predictors of breast cancer outcomes. How these signatures relate to one another in biological and prognostic contexts remains to be clarified...

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Autores principales: Nagalla, Srikanth, Chou, Jeff W, Willingham, Mark C, Ruiz, Jimmy, Vaughn, James P, Dubey, Purnima, Lash, Timothy L, Hamilton-Dutoit, Stephen J, Bergh, Jonas, Sotiriou, Christos, Black, Michael A, Miller, Lance D
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2013
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3798758/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23618380
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/gb-2013-14-4-r34
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author Nagalla, Srikanth
Chou, Jeff W
Willingham, Mark C
Ruiz, Jimmy
Vaughn, James P
Dubey, Purnima
Lash, Timothy L
Hamilton-Dutoit, Stephen J
Bergh, Jonas
Sotiriou, Christos
Black, Michael A
Miller, Lance D
author_facet Nagalla, Srikanth
Chou, Jeff W
Willingham, Mark C
Ruiz, Jimmy
Vaughn, James P
Dubey, Purnima
Lash, Timothy L
Hamilton-Dutoit, Stephen J
Bergh, Jonas
Sotiriou, Christos
Black, Michael A
Miller, Lance D
author_sort Nagalla, Srikanth
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Gene expression signatures indicative of tumor proliferative capacity and tumor-immune cell interactions have emerged as principal biology-driven predictors of breast cancer outcomes. How these signatures relate to one another in biological and prognostic contexts remains to be clarified. RESULTS: To investigate the relationship between proliferation and immune gene signatures, we analyzed an integrated dataset of 1,954 clinically annotated breast tumor expression profiles randomized into training and test sets to allow two-way discovery and validation of gene-survival associations. Hierarchical clustering revealed a large cluster of distant metastasis-free survival-associated genes with known immunological functions that further partitioned into three distinct immune metagenes likely reflecting B cells and/or plasma cells; T cells and natural killer cells; and monocytes and/or dendritic cells. A proliferation metagene allowed stratification of cases into proliferation tertiles. The prognostic strength of these metagenes was largely restricted to tumors within the highest proliferation tertile, though intrinsic subtype-specific differences were observed in the intermediate and low proliferation tertiles. In highly proliferative tumors, high tertile immune metagene expression equated with markedly reduced risk of metastasis whereas tumors with low tertile expression of any one of the three immune metagenes were associated with poor outcome despite higher expression of the other two metagenes. CONCLUSIONS: These findings suggest that a productive interplay among multiple immune cell types at the tumor site promotes long-term anti-metastatic immunity in a proliferation-dependent manner. The emergence of a subset of effective immune responders among highly proliferative tumors has novel prognostic ramifications.
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spelling pubmed-37987582013-10-22 Interactions between immunity, proliferation and molecular subtype in breast cancer prognosis Nagalla, Srikanth Chou, Jeff W Willingham, Mark C Ruiz, Jimmy Vaughn, James P Dubey, Purnima Lash, Timothy L Hamilton-Dutoit, Stephen J Bergh, Jonas Sotiriou, Christos Black, Michael A Miller, Lance D Genome Biol Research BACKGROUND: Gene expression signatures indicative of tumor proliferative capacity and tumor-immune cell interactions have emerged as principal biology-driven predictors of breast cancer outcomes. How these signatures relate to one another in biological and prognostic contexts remains to be clarified. RESULTS: To investigate the relationship between proliferation and immune gene signatures, we analyzed an integrated dataset of 1,954 clinically annotated breast tumor expression profiles randomized into training and test sets to allow two-way discovery and validation of gene-survival associations. Hierarchical clustering revealed a large cluster of distant metastasis-free survival-associated genes with known immunological functions that further partitioned into three distinct immune metagenes likely reflecting B cells and/or plasma cells; T cells and natural killer cells; and monocytes and/or dendritic cells. A proliferation metagene allowed stratification of cases into proliferation tertiles. The prognostic strength of these metagenes was largely restricted to tumors within the highest proliferation tertile, though intrinsic subtype-specific differences were observed in the intermediate and low proliferation tertiles. In highly proliferative tumors, high tertile immune metagene expression equated with markedly reduced risk of metastasis whereas tumors with low tertile expression of any one of the three immune metagenes were associated with poor outcome despite higher expression of the other two metagenes. CONCLUSIONS: These findings suggest that a productive interplay among multiple immune cell types at the tumor site promotes long-term anti-metastatic immunity in a proliferation-dependent manner. The emergence of a subset of effective immune responders among highly proliferative tumors has novel prognostic ramifications. BioMed Central 2013 2013-04-29 /pmc/articles/PMC3798758/ /pubmed/23618380 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/gb-2013-14-4-r34 Text en Copyright © 2013 Nagalla 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
Nagalla, Srikanth
Chou, Jeff W
Willingham, Mark C
Ruiz, Jimmy
Vaughn, James P
Dubey, Purnima
Lash, Timothy L
Hamilton-Dutoit, Stephen J
Bergh, Jonas
Sotiriou, Christos
Black, Michael A
Miller, Lance D
Interactions between immunity, proliferation and molecular subtype in breast cancer prognosis
title Interactions between immunity, proliferation and molecular subtype in breast cancer prognosis
title_full Interactions between immunity, proliferation and molecular subtype in breast cancer prognosis
title_fullStr Interactions between immunity, proliferation and molecular subtype in breast cancer prognosis
title_full_unstemmed Interactions between immunity, proliferation and molecular subtype in breast cancer prognosis
title_short Interactions between immunity, proliferation and molecular subtype in breast cancer prognosis
title_sort interactions between immunity, proliferation and molecular subtype in breast cancer prognosis
topic Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3798758/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23618380
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/gb-2013-14-4-r34
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