Martin Damali N, Boersma Brenda J, Yi Ming, Reimers Mark, Howe Tiffany M, Yfantis Harry G, Tsai Yien Che, Williams Erica H, Lee Dong H, Stephens Robert M, Weissman Allan M, Ambs Stefan
Laboratory of Human Carcinogenesis, Center of Cancer Research, National Cancer Institute, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, Maryland, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2009;4(2):e4531. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0004531. Epub 2009 Feb 19.
African-American breast cancer patients experience higher mortality rates than European-American patients despite having a lower incidence of the disease. We tested the hypothesis that intrinsic differences in the tumor biology may contribute to this cancer health disparity.
Using laser capture microdissection, we examined genome-wide mRNA expression specific to tumor epithelium and tumor stroma in 18 African-American and 17 European-American patients. Numerous genes were differentially expressed between these two patient groups and a two-gene signature in the tumor epithelium distinguished between them. To identify the biological processes in tumors that are different by race/ethnicity, Gene Ontology and disease association analyses were performed. Several biological processes were identified which may contribute to enhanced disease aggressiveness in African-American patients, including angiogenesis and chemotaxis. African-American tumors also contained a prominent interferon signature. The role of angiogenesis in the tumor biology of African-Americans was further investigated by examining the extent of vascularization and macrophage infiltration in an expanded set of 248 breast tumors. Immunohistochemistry revealed that microvessel density and macrophage infiltration is higher in tumors of African-Americans than in tumors of European-Americans. Lastly, using an in silico approach, we explored the potential of tailored treatment options for African-American patients based on their gene expression profile. This exploratory approach generated lists of therapeutics that may have specific antagonistic activity against tumors of African-American patients, e.g., sirolimus, resveratrol, and chlorpromazine in estrogen receptor-negative tumors.
The gene expression profiles of breast tumors indicate that differences in tumor biology may exist between African-American and European-American patients beyond the knowledge of current markers. Notably, pathways related to tumor angiogenesis and chemotaxis could be functionally different in these two patient groups.
尽管非裔美国乳腺癌患者的发病率较低,但他们的死亡率高于欧裔美国患者。我们检验了肿瘤生物学的内在差异可能导致这种癌症健康差异的假设。
我们使用激光捕获显微切割技术,检测了18名非裔美国患者和17名欧裔美国患者肿瘤上皮和肿瘤基质特异性的全基因组mRNA表达。这两组患者之间有许多基因差异表达,肿瘤上皮中的一个双基因特征可区分这两组患者。为了确定不同种族/族裔肿瘤中的生物学过程,我们进行了基因本体论和疾病关联分析。确定了几个可能导致非裔美国患者疾病侵袭性增强的生物学过程,包括血管生成和趋化作用。非裔美国患者的肿瘤还具有显著的干扰素特征。通过检查248例乳腺肿瘤扩大样本中的血管化程度和巨噬细胞浸润情况,进一步研究了血管生成在非裔美国患者肿瘤生物学中的作用。免疫组织化学显示,非裔美国患者肿瘤中的微血管密度和巨噬细胞浸润高于欧裔美国患者肿瘤。最后,我们使用计算机模拟方法,根据非裔美国患者的基因表达谱探索了定制治疗方案的潜力。这种探索性方法生成了可能对非裔美国患者肿瘤具有特定拮抗活性的治疗药物清单,例如雌激素受体阴性肿瘤中的西罗莫司、白藜芦醇和氯丙嗪。
乳腺肿瘤的基因表达谱表明,非裔美国患者和欧裔美国患者之间可能存在肿瘤生物学差异,这超出了目前已知标志物的范围。值得注意的是,这两组患者中与肿瘤血管生成和趋化作用相关的通路在功能上可能不同。