| Literature DB >> 24478985 |
Sophia H L George1, Patricia Shaw1.
Abstract
Women who have an inherited mutation in the BRCA1 or BRCA2 genes have a substantial increased lifetime risk of developing epithelial ovarian cancer (EOC), and epidemiological factors related to parity, ovulation, and hormone regulation have a dramatic effect on the risk in both BRCA mutation carriers and non-carriers. The most common and most aggressive histotype of EOC, high-grade serous carcinoma (HGSC), is also the histotype associated with germline BRCA mutations. In recent years, evidence has emerged indicating that the likely tissue of origin of HGSC is the fallopian tube. We have reviewed, what is known about the fallopian tube in BRCA mutation carriers at both the transcriptional and translational aspect of their biology. We propose that changes of the transcriptome in BRCA heterozygotes reflect an altered response to the ovulatory stresses from the microenvironment, which may include the post-ovulation inflammatory response and altered reproductive hormone physiology.Entities:
Keywords: BRCA; fallopian tube epithelium; high-grade serous carcinoma
Year: 2014 PMID: 24478985 PMCID: PMC3901362 DOI: 10.3389/fonc.2014.00005
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Oncol ISSN: 2234-943X Impact factor: 6.244
Figure 1(A) FTE cell lines were established to study gene specific effects in relation to BRCA abrogation in BRCA mutation carriers and other aberrations identified in the precursor lesions and malignant lesions observed in situ in the distal end of the FTE. (B) FTE cell lines established from normal FTE tissue were infected with a short hairpin to BRCA1 (shBRCA1). The FTE cells with BRCA loss have the classic phenotype of senescent cells – flat, enlarged, and vacuolated. PCR confirmed knockdown. (C) In the p53 signature in the normal FTE, low proliferation, normal cell polarity, and over-expression of p53 are observed. Thus far, BRCA loss-of-heterozygosity (in mutation carriers), decrease in Rb, and increase in p16 (immunohistochemistry), CCNE1 amplification, and over-expression (FISH and immunohistochemistry); hTERT amplification (FISH), common in HGSC are also observed in the STIC lesions.
Figure 2(A) A trend is observed, where in some cases the ratio of CD68+ macrophages to CD3+ lymphocytes increases from the normal FTE to STIC to the concomitant cancer. (B) Immunohistochemistry of CD3+ and CD68+ in normal FTE, STIC (same STIC as depicted in Figure 1), and HGSC. (C) High-grade serous carcinoma is the most common type of ovarian cancer and women with BRCA1/2 mutations have a 40–60% increased lifetime risk for developing the disease. Interrogation of the normal FTE microenvironment demonstrates that there is no inherent difference in proliferation or in some immune cell populations within the histological normal tissue in FTE of BRCA1/2 mutation carriers compared to the normal population. An increase in proliferation and lymphocytes and macrophages occurs later in tumor progression when the FTE have already lost cell-cycle progression barriers and there is histological evidence of a precursor lesion.
Figure 3(A) The different phases of the ovarian cycle in pre-menopausal women is the dominant effect on gene transcription in epithelia of normal fallopian tubes in BRCA mutation carriers. Translationally, there are more cells expressing ER, PR in the follicular phase of the cycle independent of mutation status. Similarly there are significantly more cells responding to the mitogenic effects of estrogen observed by an increase in proliferation. In the post-ovulatory phase, there is an observed increase in macrophages in both BRCA mutation carriers and non-carriers. (B) Representative images of proteins expressed in normal FTE-BRCA and FTE-normal that seemingly look and express these proteins similarly. Underlying these morphological similarities is a potential haploinsufficiency predisposing FTE-BRCA to cytotoxic stresses.