Breast cancer is not a single disease, but a collection of diseases with
dozens of different mutations that crop up with varying frequency
across different breast cancer subtypes. Deeper exploration of the
genetic changes that drive breast cancer is revealing new complexity in
the leading cause of cancer death in women worldwide.
In one of the largest breast cancer sequencing efforts to date,
scientists from the Broad Institute, the National Institute of Genomic
Medicine in Mexico City, Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center, and
Dana-Farber Cancer Institute have discovered surprising alterations in
genes that were not previously associated with breast cancer. They
report their results in the June 21 issue of Nature, which is publishing a series of papers characterizing the genomic landscape of breast cancer.
One of the team's new findings, a recurrent fusion of the genes MAGI3 and AKT3 in
what is known as a translocation event, was observed in tumors from a
rare but aggressive form of breast cancer known as triple-negative
breast cancer. This cancer does not respond to conventional hormone
therapy because its tumors lack three receptors that fuel most breast
cancers: estrogen receptors, progesterone receptors, and human epidermal
growth factor receptor 2 (known as HER2). But the biological pathway
that is affected by the MAGI3-AKT3 reshuffling is already the target of experimental drugs.
The other new alteration reported by the team occurred in two
transcription factor genes. Recurrent mutations were detected in the
gene CBFB and deletions of its partner RUNX1. Cancer-causing
rearrangements of these two genes are common in blood cancers, such as
acute myeloid leukemia, but their discovery in breast cancer marks the
first time they have been seen in a solid cancer.
"These genes wouldn't top the list of genes you think would be
mutated in breast cancer," said Alfredo Hidalgo Miranda, co-senior
author of the paper and head of the cancer genomics laboratory at the
National Institute of Genomic Medicine, known by its Spanish acronym
INMEGEN. "That's exactly the point of doing this type of analysis. It
gives you the opportunity to find those genes that you never thought
would be involved in the breast cancer process."
The scientists studied two kinds of samples. They sequenced the whole
exomes -- the tiny fraction of the genome that encodes proteins -- of
103 breast cancer tumors and DNA from normal tissue from patients in
Mexico and Vietnam. They also sequenced the entire genomes of 22 breast
cancer tumors and matched normal tissue.
Their analysis confirmed the presence of previously known mutations, but it also turned up the unsuspected alterations.
"One of the lessons here is the real diversity of mutations in breast
cancer. I think it's clear there are going to be roughly 50 or so
different mutated genes in breast cancer," said Matthew Meyerson,
co-senior author of the paper, Broad senior associate member, and
professor of pathology at Dana-Farber Cancer Institute and Harvard
Medical School. "There's a big diversity of driver genes in cancer. We
don't understand what all of them are, but larger data sets will enable
us to identify them."
The mutations in CBFB and RUNX1 point to the
importance of understanding cell differentiation -- how cells become
specialized -- and transcription factors that regulate that process of
cell differentiation in epithelial tissue, which lines the inner and
outer surfaces of the body. Further studies are needed to unravel that
relationship, the authors concluded.
For the current study, inspecting the novel fusion gene MAGI1-AKT3
more closely showed not only that the translocation can transform
normal cells into cancer cells, but also that the protein produced by
the gene is insensitive to certain drugs now in clinical trials, yet
sensitive to others.
In general, fusion genes are created within the same chromosome or
across different chromosomes when parts of one gene join parts of
another to become a novel gene that wouldn't normally exist. Like the CBFB and RUNX1
mutations, translocations are also more common in blood cancers but
until now have rarely been detected in solid tumors, especially breast
cancer.
This particular MAGI1-AKT3 fusion gene produces a fusion
protein that acts in the PI 3-kinase pathway as an oncogene, or a gene
that drives cancer, revealing a new target for potential therapy. The
kinase pathway controls a multitude of cellular functions. When a gene
is mutated in this pathway, the result is uncontrolled cell growth, a
hallmark of cancer.
Other gene mutations in this pathway are well-known, but MAGI1-AKT3 is a first.
"This is the first translocation event resulting in an oncogenic
fusion protein that has been identified in this pathway," said Alex
Toker, a professor in the department of pathology at Beth Israel
Deaconess and Harvard Medical School. "That's important because this is
one of the most frequently mutated pathways in human cancer, especially
in women's cancers such as breast, ovarian, and endometrial cancer."
The most frequently mutated pathway is also the most studied and, from a pharmaceutical perspective, among the most "druggable."
In laboratory dishes, tests confirmed that the novel structure of
proteins encoded by the fusion gene provided no place for some drugs to
bind but offered targets for other drugs.
"There are many additional studies that need to be performed using
mouse models of disease that would recapitulate the expression of this
protein in the mammary gland, in addition to the mechanism by which this
protein promotes the effects associated with malignancy," Toker said.
"These are all experiments that are under way."
Once the mechanism at work in triple-negative breast cancer is
understood through animal models, the next step would be to test
chemical compounds to see how effective they might be at targeting cells
that harbor this fusion gene's protein.
Beyond these scientific findings, the study also represents a closer
look at the Latino population, thanks to the collaboration between the
Broad and INMEGEN forged through the Slim Initiative in Genomic
Medicine.
"The Slim Initiative in Genomic Medicine aims to support the
discovery of the genetic basis of diseases such as type 2 diabetes
mellitus and several types of cancer which have a profound public health
impact in Mexico and Latin America," said Roberto Tapia-Conyer,
director general of the Carlos Slim Health Institute. "This novel
bi-national scientific collaboration is contributing to put the Latin
American genome on the map of the second generation worldwide genome
studies."
INMEGEN scientists had previously built a large breast cancer study
and then scientists at both the Broad and INMEGEN exchanged clinical,
biological, and computational information.
"From the Mexican point of view, you can say the Latino population
has not been extensively characterized using genomic methods," Hidalgo
Miranda said. "This is a significant contribution to the knowledge of
the architecture of breast tumors in this particular population."
The study represented a first opportunity to study the genetic basis
of breast cancer in Mexico. Larger studies will be required to determine
whether differences in the spectrum of mutations exist between
different populations, but this was an important first step toward that
goal.
Contributors to the work also include, from the Broad and its
Harvard-affiliated hospitals: Shantanu Banerji (co-first author),
Kristian Cibulskis (co-first author), Kristin K. Brown (co-first
author), Scott L. Carter, Abbie M. Frederick, Michael S. Lawrence,
Andrey Y. Sivachenko, Carrie Sougnez, Lihua Zou, Maria L. Cortes,
Shouyong Peng, Kristin G. Ardlie, Daniel Auclair, Fujiko Duke, Joshua
Francis, Joonil Jung, Robert C. Onofrio, Melissa Parkin, Nam H. Pho,
Alex. H. Ramos, Steven E. Schumacher, Nicolas Stransky, Kristin M.
Thompson, Jose Baselga, Rameen Beroukhim, Kornelia Polyak, Dennis C.
Sgroi, Andrea L. Richardson, Eric S. Lander, Stacey B. Gabriel, Levi A.
Garraway, Todd R. Golub, and Gad Getz (co-senior author). From Mexico:
Claudia Rangel-Escareno (co-first author), Juan C. Fernandez-Lopez,
Veronica Bautista-Pina, Antonio Maffuz-Aziz, Valeria Quintanar-Jurado,
Rosa Rebollar-Vega, Sergio Rodriguez-Cuevas, Sandra L. Romero-Cordoba,
Laura Uribe-Figueroa, Gerardo Jimenez-Sanchez, and Jorge
Melendez-Zajgla.
The research was conducted as part of the Slim Initiative in Genomic
Medicine, a project funded by the Carlos Slim Health Institute in
Mexico. The work was also supported by grants from the National
Institutes of Health and the National Cancer Institute.
Journal Reference:
- Shantanu Banerji, Kristian Cibulskis, Claudia Rangel-Escareno, Kristin K. Brown, Scott L. Carter, Abbie M. Frederick, Michael S. Lawrence, Andrey Y. Sivachenko, Carrie Sougnez, Lihua Zou, Maria L. Cortes, Juan C. Fernandez-Lopez, Shouyong Peng, Kristin G. Ardlie, Daniel Auclair, Veronica Bautista-PiƱa, Fujiko Duke, Joshua Francis, Joonil Jung, Antonio Maffuz-Aziz, Robert C. Onofrio, Melissa Parkin, Nam H. Pho, Valeria Quintanar-Jurado, Alex H. Ramos, Rosa Rebollar-Vega, Sergio Rodriguez-Cuevas, Sandra L. Romero-Cordoba, Steven E. Schumacher, Nicolas Stransky, Kristin M. Thompson, Laura Uribe-Figueroa, Jose Baselga, Rameen Beroukhim, Kornelia Polyak, Dennis C. Sgroi, Andrea L. Richardson, Gerardo Jimenez-Sanchez, Eric S. Lander, Stacey B. Gabriel, Levi A. Garraway, Todd R. Golub, Jorge Melendez-Zajgla, Alex Toker, Gad Getz, Alfredo Hidalgo-Miranda, Matthew Meyerson. Sequence analysis of mutations and translocations across breast cancer subtypes. Nature, 2012; 486 (7403): 405 DOI: 10.1038/nature11154
Courtesy: ScienceDaily
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