Obesity promotes breast epithelium DNA damage in BRCA mutation carriers
Author:
Bhardwaj PriyaORCID, Iyengar Neil M., Zahid Heba, Carter Katharine M., Byun Dong Jun, Choi Man Ho, Sun Qi, Savenkov Oleksandr, Louka Charalambia, Liu Catherine, Piloco Phoebe, Acosta Monica, Bareja Rohan, Elemento Olivier, Foronda Miguel, Dow Lukas E., Oshchepkova Sofya, Giri Dilip D., Pollak Michael, Zhou Xi Kathy, Hopkins Benjamin D., Laughney Ashley M., Frey Melissa K., Ellenson Lora Hedrick, Morrow Monica, Spector Jason A., Cantley Lewis C., Brown Kristy A.ORCID
Abstract
AbstractObesity is an established risk factor for breast cancer among women in the general population after menopause. Whether elevated bodyweight is a risk factor for women with a germline mutation in BRCA1 or BRCA2 is less clear due to inconsistent findings from epidemiological studies and lack of mechanistic studies in this population. Here, we show that DNA damage in normal breast epithelium of BRCA mutation carriers is positively correlated with body mass index and with biomarkers of metabolic dysfunction. Additionally, RNA-sequencing reveals significant obesity-associated alterations to the breast adipose microenvironment of BRCA mutation carriers, including activation of estrogen biosynthesis, which impacts neighboring breast epithelial cells. We found that blockade of estrogen biosynthesis or estrogen receptor activity decreases DNA damage, whereas treatment with leptin or insulin increases DNA damage in BRCA heterozygous epithelial cells. Furthermore, we show that increased adiposity is associated with mammary gland DNA damage and increased penetrance of mammary tumors in Brca1+/- mice. Overall, our results provide mechanistic evidence in support of a link between bodyweight and breast cancer development in BRCA mutation carriers and suggests that maintaining a healthy bodyweight or pharmacologically targeting estrogen or metabolic dysfunction may reduce the risk of breast cancer in this population.One Sentence SummaryElevated bodyweight is positively associated with DNA damage in breast epithelium of BRCA mutation carriers
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
Reference80 articles.
1. Risks of Breast, Ovarian, and Contralateral Breast Cancer for BRCA1 and BRCA2 Mutation Carriers 2. Meta-Analysis ofBRCA1andBRCA2Penetrance 3. Body Fatness and Cancer — Viewpoint of the IARC Working Group 4. Breast and Ovarian Cancer Risks Due to Inherited Mutations in
BRCA1
and
BRCA2 5. J. Kotsopoulos , O. I. Olopade , P. Ghadirian , J. Lubinski , H. T. Lynch , C. Isaacs , B. Weber , C. Kim-Sing , P. Ainsworth , W. D. Foulkes , A. Eisen , P. Sun , S. A. Narod , Changes in body weight and the risk of breast cancer in BRCA1 and BRCA2mutation carriers. Breast Cancer Research 7, (2005).
|
|