| Literature DB >> 22295218 |
Heba M S Ismail1, Amina M Medhat, Amr M Karim, Nadia I Zakhary.
Abstract
Fragile histidine triad (FHIT) gene encodes a putative tumour suppressor protein. Loss of Fhit protein in cancer is attributed to different genetic alterations that affect the FHIT gene structure. In this study, we investigated the pattern of homozygous deletion that target the FHIT gene exons 3 to 9 genomic structure in Egyptian breast cancer patients. We have found that 65% (40 out of 62) of the cases exhibited homozygous deletion in at least one FHIT exon. The incidence of homozygous deletion was not associated with patients' clinicopathological parameters including patients' age, tumour grade, tumour type, and lymph node involvement. Using correlation analysis, we have observed a strong correlation between homozygous deletions of exon 3 and exon 4 (P < 0.0001). Deletions in exon 5 were positively correlated with deletions in exon 7 (P < 0.0001), Exon 8 (P < 0.027), and exon 9 (P = 0.04). Additionally, a strong correlation was observed between exons 8 and exon 9 (P < 0.0001).We conclude that FHIT gene exons are homozygously deleted at high frequency in Egyptian women population diagnosed with breast cancer. Three different patterns of homozygous deletion were observed in this population indicating different mechanisms of targeting FHIT gene genomic structure.Entities:
Year: 2011 PMID: 22295218 PMCID: PMC3262564 DOI: 10.4061/2011/325947
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Breast Cancer ISSN: 2090-3189
Patients clinicopathological features.
| Sample no. | Age | Tumour type | Grade (G) | Lymph node status |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 77 | IDC | G2 | 0/5 |
| 2 | 47 | IDC | G2 | 0/9 |
| 3 | 52 | IDC | G2 | 0/12 |
| 4 | 62 | IDC | G2 | 0/8 |
| 5 | 40 | ILC | NI | 18/18 |
| 6 | NI | Angiosarcoma | G3 | 3/19 |
| 7 | 52 | IDC | G2 | 6/6 |
| 8 | 50 | ILC | NI | 7/9 |
| 9 | 42 | IDC | G2 | 3/12 |
| 10 | 35 | IDC | G2 | 2/13 |
| 11 | 40 | IDC | G2 | 5/14 |
| 12 | 40 | ILC | NI | 3/14 |
| 13 | 55 | IDC | G2 | NI |
| 14 | 38 | IDC | G2 | 5/8 |
| 15 | 50 | IDC | G2 | 17/19 |
| 16 | 42 | IDC | G2 | 0/17 |
| 17 | NI | IDC | G3 | NI |
| 18 | 50 | ILC | NI | 0/13 |
| 19 | 58 | IDC | G3 | 14/15 |
| 20 | 41 | IDC | G2 | 4/11 |
| 21 | 46 | IDC | G3 | 0/19 |
| 22 | 42 | IDC | G2 | 2/13 |
| 23 | 50 | ILC | NI | 7/7 |
| 24 | 44 | IDC | G3 | 0/12 |
| 25 | 55 | IDC | G2 | 5/12 |
| 26 | 41 | IDC | G3 | 0/24 |
| 27 | 34 | IDC | G2 | 9/12 |
| 28 | 53 | IDC | G2 | 0/9 |
| 29 | 75 | IDC | G2 | 0/7 |
| 30 | 55 | Comedocarcinoma | NI | NI |
| 31 | NI | IDC | G2 | NI |
| 32 | 60 | IDC | G2 | 0/16 |
| 33 | 50 | IDC | G3 | 11/13 |
| 34 | 42 | IDC | G3 | 6/22 |
| 35 | 70 | IDC | G2 | 3/17 |
| 36 | 45 | Adenocarcinoma | NI | 1/14 |
| 37 | 61 | IDC | G2 | 5/18 |
| 38 | NI | IDC | NI | 0/10 |
| 39 | 58 | IDC | G3 | 0/8 |
| 40 | 52 | IDC | G2 | 1/7 |
| 41 | 42 | IDC | G2 | 1/15 |
| 42 | 55 | IDC | G2 | 1/13 |
| 43 | 35 | IDC | G2 | 15/15 |
| 44 | 45 | IDC | G2 | 0/12 |
| 45 | 40 | IDC | G2 | 11/18 |
| 46 | 55 | IDC | G2 | 6/22 |
| 47 | 40 | IDC | G3 | 11/20 |
| 48 | 35 | IDC | G3 | 6/10 |
| 49 | 55 | IDC | G2 | 4/15 |
| 50 | 34 | IDC | G2 | 4/11 |
| 51 | 50 | IDC | G3 | 1/13 |
| 52 | 65 | IDC | G2 | 5/8 |
| 53 | 62 | IDC | G2 | 4/15 |
| 54 | 42 | IDC | G3 | 0/10 |
| 55 | 40 | ILC | G1 | NI |
| 56 | NI | IDC | NI | NI |
| 57 | 50 | Medullary carcinoma | NI | NI |
| 58 | 35 | IDC | G3 | 4/12 |
| 59 | 40 | IDC | G3 | 6/22 |
| 60 | 73 | Gynecomastia* | NI | NI |
| 61 | 42 | IDC* | G2 | 5/12 |
| 62 | 44 | ILC | G1 | NI |
IDC: invasive ductal carcinoma, ILC: invasive lobular carcinoma, and NI: no information.
*Male patients.
Sequence of primers used in this study.
| Exon | Sequence | Expected size (BP) |
|---|---|---|
| Exon 3 | 3F: 5′ AGGGTGATACTAGCTGCTTT 3′ | 284 |
| 3R: 5′ TGACTTTAGCCAGTGGCA 3′ | ||
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| Exon 4 | 4F: 5′ TTGTACCTAGAGCCATCTGG 3 | 224 |
| 4R: 5′ GGATACTCACAGCAGGTCAA 3′ | ||
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| Exon 5 | 5F: 5′ TGAGGACATGTCGTTCAGATTT 3′ | 255 |
| 5R: 5′ CTGGTGTCTCCGAAGTGGGAGGG 3′ | ||
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| Exon 6 | 6F: 5′ ATGTTCTTGTGTGCCCGCTGCGGCCAGT 3′ | 147 |
| 6R: 5′ CTGCATGGAAAAGGTGAGAGAGGTCCCATG 3′ | ||
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| Exon 7 | 7F: 5′ TGGTCCCCATGAGAATACTATAAATTAACA 3′ | 305 |
| 7R: 5′ TTACGGCTCTAACACTGAGGGTCTCTCTGA 3′ | ||
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| Exon 8 | 8F: 5′ GAGTAATTGGGCTTCATGAGAGCATCACT 3′ | 225 |
| 8R: 5′ AGGTTGATGTCATCCCACCGACAGT 3′ | ||
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| Exon 9 | 9F: 5′ TTCTCCAAAGCTCCAGAAACATGACAAGGA 3′ | 119 |
| 9R: 5′ GTCTTTACCTGTGTCACTGAAAGTAGACCC 3′ | ||
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| F: 5′ TCATCACCAATTGGCAATGAG 3′ | 147 |
| R: 5′ CACTGTGTTGGCGTACAGGT 3′ | ||
Figure 1FHIT gene exons are subjected to homozygous deletions in Egyptian neoplastic and preneoplastic breast tissues. DNA was extracted from breast cancer and matched normal tissue samples then subjected to PCR analysis of FHIT exons. (a) Amplification of exons 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, and 9. β-actin was used as a control for equal amount of DNA used in the amplification. Intensity of amplified band in tumour (T) samples was compared with its relative one in normal sample (N). Samples that showed significant reduction or loss of the amplified exons were considered positive for exon homozygous deletion (HD). (b) Cumulative data of HD in individual patients. (C) Incidence of HD of FHIT exons in breast cancer patients. (c) Incidence of HD of FHIT exons in breast cancer patients. (d) Association between HD of FHIT exons and breast cancer patients' clinicopathological parameters.
Figure 2Correlation analysis between FHIT exons homozygous deletions. Correlation analysis was done using Pearson and Spearman correlation tests; “r” is correlation coefficient. Highlighted values represent significant positive correlation between the two variables. *P < 0.05, ***P < 0.0001.