| Literature DB >> 25202681 |
Georges Herbein1, Amit Kumar1.
Abstract
Breast cancer is the leading causes of cancer-related death among women. The vast majority of breast cancers are carcinomas that originate from cells lining the milk-forming ducts of the mammary gland. Numerous articles indicate that breast tumors exhibit diverse phenotypes depending on their distinct physiopathological signatures, clinical courses, and therapeutic possibilities. The human cytomegalovirus (HCMV) is a multifaceted highly host specific betaherpesvirus that is regarded as asymptomatic or mildly pathogenic virus in immunocompetent host. HCMV may cause serious in utero infections as well as acute and chronic complications in immunocompromised individual. The involvement of HCMV in late inflammatory complications underscores its possible role in inflammatory diseases and cancer. HCMV targets a variety of cell types in vivo, including macrophages, epithelial cells, endothelial cells, fibroblasts, stromal cells, neuronal cells, smooth muscle cells, and hepatocytes. HCMV can be detected in the milk after delivery and thereby HCMV could spread to adjacent mammary epithelial cells. HCMV also infects macrophages and induces an atypical M1/M2 phenotype, close to the tumor-associated macrophage phenotype, which is associated with the release of cytokines involved in cancer initiation or promotion and breast cancer of poor prognosis. HCMV antigens and DNA have been detected in tissue biopsies of breast cancers and elevation in serum HCMV IgG antibody levels has been reported to precede the development of breast cancer in some women. In this review, we will discuss the potential role of HCMV in the initiation and progression of breast cancer.Entities:
Keywords: HCMV; breast cancer; cytomegalovirus; inflammation; macrophage
Year: 2014 PMID: 25202681 PMCID: PMC4142708 DOI: 10.3389/fonc.2014.00230
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Oncol ISSN: 2234-943X Impact factor: 6.244
A list of viruses that could potentially be involved in breast cancer.
| Virus | Reference |
|---|---|
| Epstein–Barr virus | ( |
| Human cytomegalovirus | ( |
| Human papillomavirus | ( |
| Simian virus 40 | ( |
| Human polyomavirus JC | ( |
| Human polyomavirus BK | ( |
| Human mammary tumor virus | ( |
| Merkel cell polyomavirus | ( |
| Human endogenous retrovirus K | ( |
HCMV prevalence in breast cancer patients.
| Study | Subjects | HCMV IgG positivity (%) | Mean IgG | HCMV DNA positivity (%) | Reference | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sample I | Sample II | Seroconversion | |||||
| 1 | Control women ( | 82.5 | 1.18 OD | 1.22 OD | np | ( | |
| Invasive breast cancer patients ( | 78.7 | 1.09 OD | 1.19 OD | np | |||
| 2 | Non-inflammation breast cancer ( | 65 | 18.45 ± 15.7 IU/mL ( | – | 53.1 | ( | |
| Inflammation breast cancer ( | 82 | 25.96 ± 24.50 IU/mL ( | – | 78.6 | |||
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n, number of patients, np, not performed.
Figure 1Hypothetical scheme of HCMV dispersal and its possible involvement in the development of breast cancer. Two potential scenarios could ultimately result in breast tumor after HCMV infection. (1) HCMV that is present in the milk could directly infect the mammary epithelial cells lining the duct responsible for converting most precursors into milk constituents and transporting them to the mammary lumen. Subsequently, macrophages present in breast tissue could be also infected by HCMV favoring a protumoral microenvironment. (2) HCMV present in blood (viremia) could infect circulating monocytes. Upon migration of infected monocytes into breast tissue, HCMV-infected macrophages could transmit the virus to mammary epithelial cells. Additionally, monocytes/macrophages are regarded as a prominent reservoir of HCMV infection. HCMV infection of monocytes/macrophages can reprogram them to acquire M1/M2 characteristics. M1 macrophages secrete pro-inflammatory cytokines and M2 macrophages secrete immuno-suppressive factors that can promote the progression of breast cancer. Tumor-associated macrophages (TAM) that are of poor prognosis during breast cancer and fuel the progression of the disease could be preferentially activated by HCMV.
Figure 2Overview of diverse HCMV proteome involved in modulation of host cell controlled growth.
Major signaling pathways targeted by HCMV and activated in breast cancer.
| Signaling pathways altered upon HCMV infection | Effector viral protein | Drugs/inhibitors targeting signaling pathways in breast cancer | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| JAK-STAT3 | US28, IE1 | Sorafenib | ( |
| FLLL31 | ( | ||
| PI3K-AKT | IE1, IE2 | Buparlisib (BKM120) | ( |
| NVP-BEZ235 | ( | ||
| MK-2206 | ( | ||
| MAPK-ERK | gB | Sorafenib | ( |
| CI-1040 (PD184352) | ( | ||
| Wnt/beta-catenin | Not known | XAV939 | ( |
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