| Literature DB >> 24008095 |
Rachel L Atkinson, Wei T Yang, Daniel G Rosen, Melissa D Landis, Helen Wong, Michael T Lewis, Chad J Creighton, Krystal R Sexton, Sue G Hilsenbeck, Aysegul A Sahin, Abenaa M Brewster, Wendy A Woodward, Jenny C Chang.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: We hypothesized that cells present in normal tissue that bear cancer stem cell markers may represent a cancer cell of origin or a microenvironment primed for tumor development, and that their presence may correlate with the clinically defined subtypes of breast cancer that show increased tumorigenicity and stem cell features. methods: Normal tissues sampled at least 5 cm from primary tumors (normal adjacent tissue) were obtained from 61 chemotherapy-naive patients with breast cancer treated with mastectomy. Samples were stained simultaneously with immunofluorescence for CD44/CD49f/CD133/2 stem cell markers. We assessed the association between CD44+CD49f+CD133/2+ staining in normal adjacent tissue and breast cancer receptor subtype (defined by the expression of the estrogen (ER), progesterone (PR), or human epidermal growth factor-2 (Her2) receptors). We also examined the correlation between CD44+CD49f+CD133/2+ immunofluorescence and each of two previously published gene signatures, one derived from stem-cell enriched tissue and one from BRCA mutated tissue expected to have defective DNA repair.Entities:
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Year: 2013 PMID: 24008095 PMCID: PMC4053576 DOI: 10.1186/bcr3471
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Breast Cancer Res ISSN: 1465-5411 Impact factor: 6.466
Figure 1Stem cell cell surface markers were present in the triple negative normal adjacent tissues to a much greater extent than in the estrogen receptor-positive (ER) sample. (A) Normal adjacent tissue from a patient with triple-negative cancer: red, CD44; purple, CD49f; green, CD133/2; blue, 4',6-diamidino-2-phenylindole (DAPI) and combined CD44+/CD49f+/CD133/2+. Scale bar 25 μm (40×). (B) Normal adjacent tissue from a patient with ER+ disease, no combined cells CD44+/CD49f+/CD133/2+. Scale bar 25 μm (40×).
Figure 2Gene expression patterns associated with tumorigenic cells are manifested in normal breast samples with positive staining for the stem-cell markers CD44/CD49f/CD133/2. On the basis of gene expression profiling, normal breast samples were each assigned a score for similarity to a previously defined gene signature of tumorigenic cells. CD44+CD49f+CD133/2+ samples scored highly for the gene signature (P <0.001, Wilcoxon rank sum test): black bar, normal adjacent tissue. Analysis of epidemiologic factors revealed associations between stem cell presence and triple-negative tumor subtype (P = 0.001), breastfeeding (P = 0.04) and recurrence (P = 0.01). *P <0.05.
Figure 3Lack of DNA damage found in stem cell-positive tissues. (A) Inverse correlation between stem-cell signature (black bar) and defective DNA-repair signature (white bar); *P = 0.001. (B) 53BP1 staining in normal adjacent tissue. Green foci (arrows) indicate DNA damage, scale bar 50 μm. (C) The presence of 53BP1 foci correlates significantly with the defective DNA repair signature (P <0.001, Wilcoxon rank sum test). White bars, DNA damage present; black bars, no DNA damage present; asterisks indicate a recurrence event (all events were within the cohort with negative scores); closed circles indicate triple-negative breast cancer; closed squares indicate CD44+/CD49f+/CD133/2+.
Figure 4Recurrence-free survival among all patients, grouped by stem cell-staining status. Dashed lines, stem cell-negative group; solid lines, stem cell-positive group. Recurrence-free survival was better among patients with cells staining positive for stem-cell markers (P = 0.02).