| Literature DB >> 23216862 |
Kamal Datta1, Daniel R Hyduke, Shubhankar Suman, Bo-Hyun Moon, Michael D Johnson, Albert J Fornace.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Breast tissue is among the most sensitive tissues to the carcinogenic actions of ionizing radiation and epidemiological studies have linked radiation exposure to breast cancer. Currently, molecular understanding of radiation carcinogenesis in mammary gland is hindered due to the scarcity of in vivo long-term follow up data. We undertook this study to delineate radiation-induced persistent alterations in gene expression in mouse mammary glands 2-month after radiation exposure.Entities:
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Year: 2012 PMID: 23216862 PMCID: PMC3551737 DOI: 10.1186/1748-717X-7-205
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Radiat Oncol ISSN: 1748-717X Impact factor: 3.481
Figure 1Exposure to ionizing radiation results in persistent perturbations of mammary gland gene expression.A) Total number of transcripts perturbed 2-month after exposure to 2 Gy of whole body γ radiation. About 67% of the transcriptomes were upregulated and 33% remained downregulated. B) Transcripts significantly modulated relative to control (p<0.05 and more than 2-fold change) were plotted showing fold change distribution. Most of the upregulated genes were between 1 and 3 fold and the downregulated genes were clustered mostly between -1 and -2 fold.
Figure 2Confirmation of microarray data by PCR analysis. Results of PCR analysis of 2 downregulated (PPP4C, and ELF1) and 3 upregulated (MAPK12, PLCG1, and E2F6) genes showed a trend similar to the microarray fold change. NFkβ is the nodal molecule of the top upregulated network.
Significant upregulation of pathways involved in cell proliferation, metabolism and breast cancer
| Oxidative phosphorylation | 4.16 | ATP6V0E2, NDUFC1, COX6B1, NDUFS8, COX10, COX5A, NDUFS6, NDUFA12, COX7A1, ATP5G3 |
| Mitochondrial dysfunction | 4.06 | COX6B1, NDUFS8, COX10, CPT1B, COX5A, TRAK1, NDUFS6, NDUFA12, MAPK12, COX7A1 |
| Breast cancer regulation by Stathmin1 | 3.81 | PPP1R14C, PIK3C2B, E2F6, ADCY2, PRKCQ, CAMK2A, TUBA8, PPM1L, PPP2R5B, TUBA4A, PPP1R3A, TUBA3C/TUBA3D |
| ERK/MAPK signaling | 2.81 | PLA2G4E, PPP1R14C, PIK3C2B, TLN2, PLA2G12A, HSPB2, PPM1L, PPP2R5B, PLCG1, PPP1R3A |
| Cardiac β-adrenergic signaling | 2.56 | PPP1R14C, ADCY2, PPM1L, PPP2R5B, PDE4A, AKAP6, PPP1R3A, PDE4D |
| Glycolysis/gluconeogenesis | 2.47 | PGK1, PGM1, ALDOA, TPI1, Gapdh (includes others), LDHB |
| Inositol metabolism | 2.46 | ALDOA, TPI1 |
| Ubiquinone biosynthesis | 2.46 | NDUFC1, NDUFS8, UFSP1, NDUFS6, NDUFA12 |
| 14-3-3-mediated signaling | 2.44 | PIK3C2B, PRKCQ, TUBA8, TUBA4A, PLCG1, TUBA3C/TUBA3D, MAPK12 |
| Aldosterone signaling in epithelial cells | 2.16 | PIK3C2B, SACS, PRKCQ, HSPA1L, DNAJC27, HSPB2, PLCG1, DNAJB5 |
| Production of nitric oxide and reactive oxygen species in macrophages | 2.14 | PPP1R14C, PIK3C2B, PRKCQ, PPM1L, PPP2R5B, PLCG1, PPP1R3A, MAPK12 |
| Fc epsilon RI signaling | 2.03 | PLA2G4E, PIK3C2B, PRKCQ, PLA2G12A, PLCG1, MAPK12 |
| Endothelin-1 signaling | 2.03 | PLA2G4E, PIK3C2B, ADCY2, PRKCQ, PLA2G12A, GNAO1, PLCG1, MAPK12 |
| Dopamine receptor signaling | 1.96 | PPP1R14C, ADCY2, PPM1L, PPP2R5B, PPP1R3A |
| CCR3 signaling in eosinophils | 1.83 | PLA2G4E, PIK3C2B, PRKCQ, PLA2G12A, CFL2, MAPK12 |
| Type II diabetes mellitus signaling | 1.81 | PIK3C2B, RKCQ, PRKAB2, MAPK12, ADIPOR1, KCNJ11 |
| Thrombopoietin signaling | 1.75 | PIK3C2B, THPO, PRKCQ, PLCG1 |
| CTLA4 signaling in cytotoxic T lymphocytes | 1.73 | PIK3C2B, AP1S2, PPM1L, PPP2R5B, PLCG1 |
| CDK5 signaling | 1.71 | PPP1R14C, ADCY2, PPM1L, PPP2R5B, PPP1R3A |
| TR/RXR activation | 1.69 | PIK3C2B, RXRG, SLC16A3, UCP1, PPARGC1A |
| Protein kinase A signaling | 1.68 | PPP1R14C, ADCY2, PRKCQ, CAMK2A, HIST1H1A, PDE4A, PLCG1, AKAP6, PPP1R3A, TTN, PDE4D |
| Synaptic long term depression | 1.65 | PLA2G4E, PRKCQ, PLA2G12A, PPM1L, GNAO1, PPP2R5B |
| Role of MAPK signaling in the pathogenesis of influenza | 1.62 | PLA2G4E, PLA2G12A, MAPK12, RABGEF1 |
| Cell cycle regulation by BTG family proteins | 1.58 | E2F6, PPM1L, PPP2R5B |
| MIF regulation of innate immunity | 1.52 | PLA2G4E, PLA2G12A, MAPK12 |
| glioma signaling | 1.52 | PIK3C2B, E2F6, PRKCQ, CAMK2A, PLCG1 |
| Phenylalanine, tyrosine and tryptophan biosynthesis | 1.50 | GOT1, GOT2 |
| AMPK signaling | 1.48 | PIK3C2B, PRKAB2, CPT1B, PPM1L, PPP2R5B, MAPK12 |
| Melatonin signaling | 1.46 | PRKCQ, CAMK2A, GNAO1, PLCG1 |
| Macropinocytosis signaling | 1.44 | PIK3C2B, PRKCQ, PLCG1, ITGB6 |
| Cysteine metabolism | 1.43 | GOT1, GOT2, LDHB |
| ILK signaling | 1.40 | PIK3C2B, CFL2, PPM1L, PPP2R5B, MAPK12, ITGB6, MYH1 |
| Protein ubiquitination pathway | 1.38 | SACS, USP15, HSPA1L, USP13, UBE2B, DNAJC27, HSPB2, USP2, DNAJB5 |
| Corticotropin releasing hormone Signaling | 1.32 | ADCY2, PRKCQ, GNAO1, PLCG1, MAPK12 |
| HER-2 signaling in breast cancer | 1.30 | PIK3C2B, PRKCQ, PLCG1, ITGB6 |
Figure 3Radiation-induced alterations in canonical pathways identified by Ingenuity Pathway Analysis.A) A total of 37 canonical pathways were significantly upregulated (p<0.05 indicated by threshold line). B) A total of 7 canonical pathways were downregulated (p<0.05).
Few pathways were downregulated and fewer were involved in cellular proliferation
| Fcγ receptor-mediated phagocytosis in macrophages and monocytes | 2.44 | EZR, LYN, ACTG1, PRKCB |
| G-Protein coupled receptor signaling | 1.92 | PRLHR, GPR173, PTGIR, GPRC5A, GLP2R, FZD3, GPR113, ADCY7, CELSR2, PRKCB |
| Factors promoting cardiogenesis in vertebrates | 1.64 | FZD3, TDGF1, PRKCB |
| Natural killer cell signaling | 1.60 | SH3BP2, Klra4 (includes others), PRKCB |
| Mechanisms of viral exit from host cells | 1.55 | ACTG1, PRKCB |
| Leukocyte extravasation signaling | 1.45 | EZR, MMP11, ACTG1, PRKCB |
| p70S6K signaling | 1.32 | LYN, RPS6, PRKCB |
Upregulated networks with score ≥8 are presented
| 1 | 26sProteasome, | 44 | 28 | Cell Death, Neurological Disease, Cellular Development |
| 2 | 21 | 17 | Genetic Disorder, Neurological Disease, Skeletal and Muscular Disorders | |
| 3 | ACTA1, ACTN1, | 19 | 16 | Reproductive System Development and Function, Cellular Development, Cellular Growth and Proliferation |
| 4 | ABCC9, | 16 | 14 | Molecular Transport, Genetic Disorder, Carbohydrate Metabolism |
| 5 | AHR, APAF1, | 16 | 14 | Cell Cycle, Cell Death, Hematological System Development and Function |
| 6 | ATF3, | 16 | 14 | Cell Death, Neurological Disease, Tissue Morphology |
| 7 | ACSL1, APOA4, BCL2, CITED2, | 16 | 14 | Energy Production, Lipid Metabolism, Small Molecule Biochemistry |
| 8 | APOA4, ATF3, CD3, CD80, CD86, CEBPB, CIITA, COL1A1, | 14 | 13 | Cellular Growth and Proliferation, Hematological System Development and Function, Tissue Development |
| 9 | ACTA1, ACTC1, AGTR1, C14orf166, | 14 | 13 | Cellular Function and Maintenance, Molecular Transport, Cellular Assembly and Organization |
| 10 | ABHD5, ADAM12, | 11 | 11 | Cell Death, Cell-To-Cell Signaling and Interaction, Nervous System Development and Function |
| 11 | ADAM10, | 10 | 10 | Cancer, Tissue Development, Embryonic Development |
| 12 | 8 | 9 | Cellular Movement, Cell Death, Immune Cell Trafficking |
Highlighted genes are from the microarray dataset.
Downregulated networks with score ≥8 are presented
| 1 | AGTR1, | 26 | 16 | Cell Morphology, Cellular Growth and Proliferation, Hematological System Development and Function |
| 2 | 24 | 15 | Cellular Compromise, Inflammatory Response, Cell Signaling | |
| 3 | AHR, | 24 | 15 | Tissue Morphology, Cancer, Gene Expression |
| 4 | ACSL1, ADAM17, | 18 | 12 | Lipid Metabolism, Small Molecule Biochemistry, Vitamin and Mineral Metabolism |
Highlighted genes are from the microarray dataset.
Figure 4IPA identified two top signaling networks with genes involved in carcinogenesis.A) The first network is cellular growth and development network with NFkB as the nodal molecule. At least 12 (ACHE, HSPA1L, MYOD1, NES, NOL3, P2RY2, PGK1, PLCG1, PPARGC1A, PRKCQ, S100B, and SNTA1) genes from this upregulated network are associated with initiation and progression of human cancer. B) The second network is genetic disorder, neurological disease, skeletal and muscular disorders and at least 4 upregulated genes (ALDOA, GNAO1, SLC16A3, and TPI1) are known to be involved in cancer.
Figure 5Upregulation of cellular proliferation and metabolic pathways involved in neoplasia.A) The third upregulated network involves reproductive system development and function, cellular development, cellular growth and proliferation and upregulation of at least one gene (LBX1) has been associated with cellular transformation. B) The fourth upregulated network involves molecular transport, genetic disorder, carbohydrate metabolism and at least 5 (ALDOA, LDHB, SLC16A3, TPI1, VDAC1) genes are related to carcinogenesis.
Figure 6Cell cycle and cell death related pathways were upregulated. A) The fifth upregulated network is involved in cell cycle, cell death, hematological system development as well as estrogen signaling such as CCNG1, E2F6, and ESRRG. B) The molecules in the sixth network are know to regulate cell death, neurological disease, and tissue morphology.
Figure 7Two networks were associated with energy production and cell proliferation.A) Major functions associated with this network are energy production, lipid metabolism, and small molecule biochemistry, and has a score of 16. B) The eighth network had a score of 14 and major functions associated with this network are cellular growth and proliferation, hematological system development and function, and tissue development.
Figure 8Cell-to-cell signaling and molecular transport related to carcinogenesis were upregulated.A) With a score of 14 this pathway network is associated with cellular function and maintenance, molecular transport, cellular assembly and organization. B) Eleven genes from the microarray data set were associated with this pathway and identified cell death, cell-to-cell signaling and interaction, nervous system development and function as major functions.
Figure 9Cancer and cell death related pathways were upregulated.A) Genes in this pathway are involved in cancer, tissue development, and embryonic development. B) The twelfth network had a score of 8 and 9 genes from the data set are associated with the network which is involved in cellular movement, cell death, and immune cell trafficking.
Figure 10The downregulated networks may accelerate cellular transformation.A) The top downregulated network has TGFβ as the nodal molecule and downregulation of at least 8 genes (ARHGAP17, BAMBI, BCL9, BRCC3, CELSR2, NAB2, PRKCB, SEMA4D) in the network facilitates carcinogenesis. B) The second downregulated network has 6 genes (ACPP, GPRC5A, KIT, LYN, MAP2, and TDGF1) which may paly a role in cellular transformation.
Figure 11Balancing promotion and inhibition of cell proliferation in the downregulated networks.A) Although 1 gene (GHRH) involved in cell proliferation is downregulated in the third network, we observed downregulation of at least 4 key genes (ELF1, MTA3, RUNX1, and TYMS) related to tumor suppressor function. B) The fourth downregulated network with a significant score of 18 has TNF as the nodal molecule and downregulation of at least 2 genes (APOBEC3B, CHSY3) are known to promote carcinogenesis.
Genes from upregulated networks: A number of genes from the data set are associated with breast cancer
| Acetylcholinesterase | “Tumor size was significantly higher when the ACHE gene was amplified in breast cancer.”
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| heat shock 70kDa protein 1-like | “….HSPA1L and HSPA2 could represent potential biomarkers to follow up the effectiveness of 17AAG in breast cancer”
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| Nestin | “Among the breast cancer subtypes, nestin is highly expressed in basal breast cancer subtype”
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| purinergic receptor P2Y, G-protein coupled, 2 | “P2Y2 receptor-mediated modulation of estrogen-induced proliferation of breast cancer cells”
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| phospholipase C, gamma 1 | “Phospholipase Cgamma1 is required for metastasis development and progression”
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| peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor gamma, coactivator 1 alpha | “Associations of genetic variants in the estrogen receptor coactivators PPARGC1A, PPARGC1B and EP300 with familial breast cancer”
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| protein kinase C, theta | “PKCtheta promotes c-Rel-driven mammary tumorigenesis in mice”
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| syntrophin, alpha 1 | “….significant increase in expression of SNTA1 protein compared with the normal tissue was observed in breast carcinoma samples”
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| Aldolase A | “…hypoxia-responsive; prognostic significance in breast cancer”
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| guanine nucleotide binding protein (G protein), alpha activating activity polypeptide O | “GNAO1 (Gαo) gene was identified in breast carcinomas and shown to promote oncogenic transformation when introduced into cells”
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| solute carrier family 16, member 3 | “Expression of SLC16A3 gene is higher in breast cancer distant metastasis….”
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| triosephosphate isomerase 1 | “Glycolytic cancer associated fibroblasts promote breast cancer tumor growth, without a measurable increase in angiogenesis: evidence for stromal-epithelial metabolic coupling”
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| elongation factor, RNA polymerase II, 2 | ELL2 is a Breast Cancer Antioestrogen Resistance (BCAR) 1 gene which control anti-oestrogen-resistant cell growth resistance (BCAR)
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| cyclin G1 | “We have identified cyclin G as being overexpressed in breast and prostate cancer cells”
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| E2F transcription factor 6 | “E2F6 represses transcription of the | |
| Estrogen-related receptor γ | “Estrogen-related receptor γ modulates cell proliferation and estrogen signaling in breast cancer & ERRγ mRNA was up-regulated dose-dependently by estrogen….”
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| mitogen-activated protein kinase 12. Also known as ERK3; ERK6; SAPK3; PRKM12; SAPK-3; P38GAMMA | “…elevated expression of p38γ is associated with lower overall survival of patients with breast cancer”
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| hydroxysteroid (17-beta) dehydrogenase 7 | The stimulation of HSD17B7 expression by estradiol provides a powerful feed-forward mechanism for estradiol biosynthesis in breast cancer cells
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| transforming, acidic coiled-coil containing protein 2 | “This suggests that increased TACC2 may mediate an oncogenic effect on breast cancer cells and indicates that TACC2 may be a potential therapeutic target”
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| DEAD (Asp-Glu-Ala-Asp) box polypeptide 1 | “Here, we identify DDX1 RNA overexpression as an independent prognostic marker for early recurrence in primary breast cancer……”
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| myosin, heavy chain 1, skeletal muscle, adult | Recently, MYH1 encoding skeletal muscle myosin heavy polypeptide 1 and MYH9 encoding non-muscle myosin heavy chain type A, were identified as candidate breast cancer genes in systematic analyses of the breast cancer genome
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| uncoupling protein 1 (mitochondrial) | We conclude that UCP1 is up-regulated in breast cancer cell lines and primary breast as well as other tumors
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| Protein kinase C and casein kinase substrate in neurons protein 3 | “New targets for breast cancer treatment were identified such as ZONAB, PACSIN3, MRP8 and SUMO1, which have human homologues”
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| phosphoglucomutase 1 | “This gene has been identified as one of the ER status markers in the diagnosis and prognosis of breast cancer patients….”
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| talin 2 | “Serum estradiol levels associated with specific gene expression patterns in normal breast tissue and in breast carcinomas……”
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| adiponectin receptor 1 | “Variants of the Adiponectin and Adiponectin Receptor 1 Genes and Breast Cancer Risk…”
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| paired-like homeodomain 1 | “The estrogen-regulated transcription factor PITX1 coordinates gene-specific regulation by estrogen receptor-alpha in breast cancer cells…”
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Genes from downregulated network
| cadherin, EGF LAG seven-pass G-type receptor 2 | “Celsr2 was down-regulated in one cell line and in 7% of breast cancers”
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| protein kinase C, beta | PRKCB has been observed to be downregulated in estrogen receptor negative breast cancer
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| v-kit Hardy-Zuckerman 4 feline sarcoma viral oncogene homolog. Also known as C-Kit; CD117 | Loss of c-kit expression has been reported in 80-90% of breast cancer specimens, suggesting a possible role in the development of tumors
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| microtubule-associated protein 2 | “Elevation of MAP2 in breast cancer cell lines led to increased paclitaxel sensitivity” [41]. | |
| teratocarcinoma-derived growth factor 1. Also known as CR; CRGF; CRIPTO | “Overexpression of human Cripto-1 in transgenic mice delays mammary gland development and differentiation and induces mammary tumorigenesis”
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| E74-like factor 1 | “All of the mouse and most human mammary tumors also displayed decreased expression of genes known to inhibit cell proliferation, including NFKBIA (IKBalpha), GADD45B, and CDKN1A (p21); transcription-related genes such as CEBP, JUN, JUNB, and ELF1;….”
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| runt-related transcription factor 1 | “Furthermore, we found that RUNX1 expression was reduced in high-grade primary breast tumors compared to low/mid-grade tumors”
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| thymidylate synthetase | “Gene polymorphisms in TYMS, MTHFR, p53 and MDR1 as risk factors for breast cancer: a case–control study”
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A number of genes identified with the downregulated networks are associated with breast cancer.