| Literature DB >> 21453500 |
Marit Waaseth1, Karina S Olsen, Charlotta Rylander, Eiliv Lund, Vanessa Dumeaux.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Postmenopausal hormone therapy (HT) influences endogenous hormone concentrations and increases the risk of breast cancer. Gene expression profiling may reveal the mechanisms behind this relationship.Our objective was to explore potential associations between sex hormones and gene expression in whole blood from a population-based, random sample of postmenopausal womenEntities:
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Year: 2011 PMID: 21453500 PMCID: PMC3078834 DOI: 10.1186/1755-8794-4-29
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Med Genomics ISSN: 1755-8794 Impact factor: 3.063
Figure 1Study population.
Participant characteristics given as mean (SD) or frequency (%)
| Age, years | 55.7 (3.6) | ||
| BMI, kg/m2 | 25.6 (4.3) | ||
| Among women not using medication | |||
| Sex hormone concentration | 1.quartile (low) | 4.quartile (high) | |
| Estradiol nmol/L | 0.10 (0.09) | <0.05] (0.05) | >0.08 (0.14) |
| Progesterone nmol/L | 0.99 (0.67) | <0.55] (0.44) | >1.21 (1.79) |
| Testosterone nmol/L | 1.16 (0.74) | <0.66] (0.50) | >1.54 (2.14) |
| FSH IU/L | 70.2 (28.0) | <56.4] (44.5) | >91.2 (106.4) |
| SHBG nmol/L | 47.6 (21.8) | <32.0] (24.2) | >61.0 (75.1) |
| Medication use | 182 (64%) | ||
| HT | 52 (18%) | ||
| E2 and E2/P systemic | 32 (62%) | ||
| E2 systemic alone | 9 (17%) | ||
| Tibolone | 10 (19%) | ||
| Vaginal treatment | 9 (17%) | ||
| Thyroxine | 20 (7%) | ||
| Other medication | 159 (56%) | ||
| No medication | 98 (34%) | ||
| Number of medications used (n = 182) | |||
| 1 medication | 97 (53%) | ||
| 2 medications | 62 (34%) | ||
| >2 medications | 23 (13%) | ||
| Current smoker | |||
| Yes | 75 (26%) | ||
| No | 209 (73%) | ||
Number of genes differentially expressed between HT users and non-users (in the Limma analysis)
| HT type | Total sample N | Single users1 N | Number of genes FDR <0.25 |
|---|---|---|---|
| HT all types | 52 | 23 | 5(9)2 |
| E2 or E2/P systemic | 32 | 15 | 33 |
| E2 systemic | 9 | 7 | 10 |
| Tibolone | 10 | 2 | 400 |
| Tibolone23 | 10 | 10 | 0(58)3 |
| Thyroxine | 20 | 5 | 8 |
| Non-users | 98 | 98 |
1 Users of other medication excluded.
2 FDR <0.28, 5 genes with FDR <0.25
3 All tibolone users were included in the analysis; there were 58 genes with FDR <0.50
Figure 2The three gene sets (circles) found when comparing different categories of HT users with non-users. The partly overlapping circles show which genes were significant for one, two or all three HT categories. All three categories include users of systemic E2. Gene symbols in red denote genes up-regulated in users and gene symbols in green denote genes up-regulated in non-users. Among the 9 HT genes, LOC344178, SET, MGC4618 and MORC2 have FDR <0.28, the remaining 5 genes have FDR <0.25.
Figure 3The tibolone gene set (21 genes) in HEFalMp. The network between core genes (in grey) related to tibolone use and genes (in white) predicted by Hefalmp in relation to this query, considering all genes in all biological processes.
Figure 4Gene plot of the "E. The reference line for each bar represents the expected height under the null hypothesis (i.e., that the gene is not associated with hormone concentrations). The marks indicate the number of standard deviations above the reference line.