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Global Histone Modifications in Breast Cancer Correlate with Tumor Phenotypes, Prognostic Factors, and Patient Outcome

Authors :
Graham Ball
Somaia Elsheikh
Magdy K. Abdelghany
Emad A. Rakha
C. Paish
Luisa Martinez-Pomares
Andrew R. Green
Hilary M. Collins
Jonathan M. Garibaldi
David M. Heery
Ian O. Ellis
Des G. Powe
Daniele Soria
Amr A. Ammar
Matthew J. Grainge
Rabab A. Ahmed
Source :
Cancer Research. 69:3802-3809
Publication Year :
2009
Publisher :
American Association for Cancer Research (AACR), 2009.

Abstract

Post-translational histone modifications are known to be altered in cancer cells, and loss of selected histone acetylation and methylation marks has recently been shown to predict patient outcome in human carcinoma. Immunohistochemistry was used to detect a series of histone lysine acetylation (H3K9ac, H3K18ac, H4K12ac, and H4K16ac), lysine methylation (H3K4me2 and H4K20me3), and arginine methylation (H4R3me2) marks in a well-characterized series of human breast carcinomas (n = 880). Tissue staining intensities were assessed using blinded semiquantitative scoring. Validation studies were done using immunofluorescence staining and Western blotting. Our analyses revealed low or absent H4K16ac in the majority of breast cancer cases (78.9%), suggesting that this alteration may represent an early sign of breast cancer. There was a highly significant correlation between histone modifications status, tumor biomarker phenotype, and clinical outcome, where high relative levels of global histone acetylation and methylation were associated with a favorable prognosis and detected almost exclusively in luminal-like breast tumors (93%). Moderate to low levels of lysine acetylation (H3K9ac, H3K18ac, and H4K12ac), lysine (H3K4me2 and H4K20me3), and arginine methylation (H4R3me2) were observed in carcinomas of poorer prognostic subtypes, including basal carcinomas and HER-2-positive tumors. Clustering analysis identified three groups of histone displaying distinct pattern in breast cancer, which have distinct relationships to known prognostic factors and clinical outcome. This study identifies the presence of variations in global levels of histone marks in different grades, morphologic types, and phenotype classes of invasive breast cancer and shows that these differences have clinical significance. [Cancer Res 2009;69(9):3802–9]

Details

ISSN :
15387445 and 00085472
Volume :
69
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Cancer Research
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....9bfcf48add796c307e8820c95e05e704
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1158/0008-5472.can-08-3907