Author:
Alothman Sahar J.,Kang Keunsoo,Liu Xuefeng,Krawczyk Ewa,Azhar Redha I.,Hu Rong,Goerlitz David,Kallakury Bhaskar V.,Furth Priscilla A.
Abstract
AbstractBiology and transcriptomes of non-cancerous human mammary epithelial cells at risk for breast cancer development were explored following primary isolation utilizing conditional reprogramming cell technology from mastectomy tissue ipsilateral to invasive breast cancer. Cultures demonstrated consistent categorizable behaviors. Relative viability and mammosphere formation differed between samples but were stable across three different mammary-specific media. E2F cell cycle target genes expression levels were positively correlated with viability and advancing age was inversely associated. Estrogen growth response was associated with Tissue necrosis factor signaling and Interferon alpha response gene enrichment. Neoadjuvant chemotherapy exposure significantly altered transcriptomes, shifting them towards expression of genes linked to mammary stem cell formation. Breast cancer prognostic signature sets include genes that in normal development are limited to specific stages of pregnancy or the menstrual cycle. Sample transcriptomes were queried for stage specific gene expression patterns. All cancer samples and a portion of high-risk samples showed overlapping stages reflective of abnormal gene expression patterns, while other high-risk samples exhibited more stage specific patterns. In conclusion, at-risk cells preserve behavioral and transcriptome diversity that could reflect different risk profiles. It is possible that prognostic platforms analogous to those used for breast cancer could be developed for high-risk mammary cells.
Funder
King Abdullah Scholarship Program, Ministry Of Higher Education, Kingdom of Saudi Arabia
National Institutes of Health
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Cited by
4 articles.
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