Proteomic analysis of archival breast cancer clinical specimens identifies biological subtypes with distinct survival outcomes

Author:

Asleh KaramaORCID,Negri Gian LucaORCID,Spencer Miko Sandra E.ORCID,Colborne Shane,Hughes Christopher S.ORCID,Wang Xiu Q.,Gao Dongxia,Gilks C. Blake,Chia Stephen K. L.,Nielsen Torsten O.ORCID,Morin Gregg B.ORCID

Abstract

AbstractDespite advances in genomic classification of breast cancer, current clinical tests and treatment decisions are commonly based on protein level information. Formalin-fixed paraffin-embedded (FFPE) tissue specimens with extended clinical outcomes are widely available. Here, we perform comprehensive proteomic profiling of 300 FFPE breast cancer surgical specimens, 75 of each PAM50 subtype, from patients diagnosed in 2008-2013 (n = 178) and 1986-1992 (n = 122) with linked clinical outcomes. These two cohorts are analyzed separately, and we quantify 4214 proteins across all 300 samples. Within the aggressive PAM50-classified basal-like cases, proteomic profiling reveals two groups with one having characteristic immune hot expression features and highly favorable survival. Her2-Enriched cases separate into heterogeneous groups differing by extracellular matrix, lipid metabolism, and immune-response features. Within 88 triple-negative breast cancers, four proteomic clusters display features of basal-immune hot, basal-immune cold, mesenchymal, and luminal with disparate survival outcomes. Our proteomic analysis characterizes the heterogeneity of breast cancer in a clinically-applicable manner, identifies potential biomarkers and therapeutic targets, and provides a resource for clinical breast cancer classification.

Funder

Gouvernement du Canada | Canadian Institutes of Health Research

Canadian Cancer Society Research Institute

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Subject

General Physics and Astronomy,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology,General Chemistry,Multidisciplinary

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