| Literature DB >> 35701800 |
Thomas E Bartlett1, Iona Evans2, Allison Jones2, James E Barrett2,3,4, Shaun Haran2, Daniel Reisel2, Kiriaki Papaikonomou5, Louise Jones6, Chiara Herzog3,4, Nora Pashayan7, Bruno M Simões8, Robert B Clarke8, D Gareth Evans9, Talayeh S Ghezelayagh10,11, Sakthivignesh Ponandai-Srinivasan5, Nageswara R Boggavarapu5, Parameswaran G Lalitkumar5, Sacha J Howell8,12, Rosa Ana Risques10, Angelique Flöter Rådestad5, Louis Dubeau13, Kristina Gemzell-Danielsson5, Martin Widschwendter14,15,16,17.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Breast cancer is a leading cause of death in premenopausal women. Progesterone drives expansion of luminal progenitor cells, leading to the development of poor-prognostic breast cancers. However, it is not known if antagonising progesterone can prevent breast cancers in humans. We suggest that targeting progesterone signalling could be a means of reducing features which are known to promote breast cancer formation.Entities:
Keywords: Antiprogestins; BRCA1; Breast cancer; DNA methylation; Epigenetics; Intermediate surrogate marker; Prevention
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Year: 2022 PMID: 35701800 PMCID: PMC9199133 DOI: 10.1186/s13073-022-01063-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Genome Med ISSN: 1756-994X Impact factor: 15.266
Fig. 1Summary of the rationale and design of the study. Abbreviations: mut (mutation); wt (wild-type); pcgt (polycomb-group targets); NB (normal breast); CO (control); BB (breast biopsy); BC (breast cancer)
Fig. 2Effect of the BRCA1/2 mutation carrier states on estradiol and progesterone levels during menstrual cycle progression. Estradiol and progesterone hormone levels were significantly greater over one cycle in BRCA1/2 mutation carriers (n = 12) than in controls (n = 8): a and b show the time-series (respectively) for estradiol and progesterone (normalised by cycle length) with one-week moving average lines. c One-week moving windows (as used to plot the moving average lines in a and b) were used to assess how the relative increase in hormone levels in BRCA1/2 mutation carriers (compared to controls) varies during the cycle. All significances were assessed with t-tests
Fig. 3WID-Breast29 score in triple negative breast cancer (TNBC) and adjacent normal tissues. a The WID-Breast29 score is based on 37 CpGs from 29 genes and b was significantly greater in normal breast tissue surrounding TNBC (n = 14) when compared to normal tissue from cancer-free women (n = 14); significance was assessed with the t-test. c The WID-Breast29 score also increased significantly when transitioning from normal surrounding tissue to TNBC (n = 14) or d ER+ve/PR+ve breast cancer (n = 31); gold lines indicate increasing and blue decreasing values from surround normal to the cancer tissue in individual breast cancer patients; significance was assessed with the paired-sample t-test. e The WID-Breast29 score was also significantly associated with patient survival outcome in 257 TCGA breast cancer samples (after adjusting for covariates); significance was assessed by z-tests on the Wald statistics after fitting a multivariate Cox proportional hazards model
Fig. 4Assessment of breast epithelium composition in TNBC. a Fractional composition of breast-tissue samples was assessed using a well-validated algorithm [37], based on our custom-designed DNAme reference profiles for breast epithelial cell subtypes (Materials and Methods). b There was a highly significant increase in luminal progenitor cell concentration in TNBC (compared to normal surrounding tissue in the same volunteers, n = 14), whereas c the mature luminal cell proportion was unchanged and the d basal cell fraction decreased. e Comparing normal tissues in the same volunteers (n = 31) to ER+ve/PR+ve breast cancers, there was a decrease in luminal progenitors and f a highly significant increase in mature luminal cells and g no changes were noted in basal cells; gold lines indicate increasing and blue decreasing values from surround normal to the cancer tissue in individual breast cancer patients (b-g). h RANKL and i RANK expression (respectively) were significantly correlated with mature luminal and luminal progenitor cell proportion in 38 healthy breast tissue samples from TCGA; j the mean of the normalised RANKL and RANK expression levels was significantly correlated with the WID-Breast29 index in the same 38 samples. Significances in b–g were assessed with the paired-sample t-test, and those in h–j were assessed with Pearson’s correlation test. F, Fat cells; I, Immune cells; E, Epithelial cells; S, Stromal cells; LP, Luminal Progenitors; LM, Luminal Mature; B, Basal
Fig. 5Effects of vitamins (placebo/comparator), mifepristone and ulipristal acetate treatment on intermediate cancer surrogate endpoints in normal breast tissue from healthy women. The impact of Vitamin (a–c), Mifepristone (d–f) and Ulipristal acetate (h–j) on the mitotic age index WID-Breast29 (a, d, h), luminal progenitor cell fraction (b, e, i) and basal cell fraction (c, f, j) in healthy, unaffected women at lower and higher breast cancer risk. g RANKL mRNA expression before and after treatment with mifepristone (as assessed by real-time PCR). k Correlation of the change in WID-Breast29 index with the change in breast epithelial subtype fractions in all samples in a–f, h–j. All significances in a–j were assessed with the paired-sample t-test. Significance in k was assessed with Pearson’s correlation test. Gold lines indicate increasing and blue lines decreasing values from the breast biopsy taken before to biopsy taken after treatment
Fig. 6Mifepristone treatment and the dynamics of TP53 mutations in normal breast tissue and suggested model for the prevention of triple negative breast cancer. a TP53 mutation frequency and b TP53 mutation count in normal breast tissue before and after mifepristone exposure in women who showed a decrease of the WID-Breast29 index after mifepristone (responders) and who did not show a decrease (non-responders); significance was assessed with the two-sided t-test. c Progesterone triggers release of RANKL in hormone receptor (HR) positive mature luminal cells leading to increased proliferation and thus accelerated mitotic ageing in HR negative luminal progenitor cells resulting in increased cancer risk; these effects are reduced after treatment with the progesterone antagonist mifepristone. HR, hormone receptor