We
recently showed that differential expression of extracellular matrix (ECM)
genes delineates four subgroups of breast carcinomas (ECM1, -2, -3- and -4)
with different clinical outcome. To further investigate the characteristics of
ECM signature and its impact on tumor progression, we conducted unsupervised
clustering analyses in 6 additional independent datasets of invasive breast
tumors from different platforms for a total of 643 samples. Use of four
different clustering algorithms identified ECM3 tumors as an independent group
in all datasets tested. ECM3 showed a homogeneous gene pattern, consisting of
58 genes encoding 43 structural ECM proteins. From 26 to 41% of the cases were
ECM3-enriched, and analysis of datasets relevant to gene expression in
neoplastic or corresponding stromal cells showed that both stromal and breast
carcinoma cells can coordinately express ECM3 genes. In in vitro experiments,
β-estradiol induced ECM3 gene production in ER-positive breast carcinoma cell
lines, whereas TGFβ induced upregulation of the genes leading to ECM3 gene
classification, especially in ER-negative breast carcinoma cells and in
fibroblasts. Multivariate analysis of distant metastasis-free survival in
untreated breast tumor patients revealed a significant interaction between ECM3
and histological grade (p = 0.001). Cox models, estimated
separately in grade I-II and grade III tumors, indicated a highly significant
association between ECM3 and worse survival probability only in grade III
tumors (HR = 3.0, 95% CI = 1.3-7.0,
p = 0.0098). Gene Set Enrichment
analysis of ECM3 compared to non-ECM3 tumors revealed significant enrichment of
epithelial-mesenchymal transition (EMT) genes in both grade I-II and grade III
subsets of ECM3 tumors. Thus, ECM3 is a robust cluster that identifies breast
carcinomas with EMT features but with accelerated metastatic potential only in
the undifferentiated (grade III) phenotype. These findings support the key
relevance of neoplastic and stroma interaction in breast cancer progression.
Source: Neoplastic and stromal cells contribute to an
extracellular matrix gene expression profile defining a breast cancer subtype
likely to progress. Triulzi T, Casalini P, Sandri M, Ratti M, Carcangiu ML,
Colombo MP, Balsari A, Ménard S, Orlandi R, Tagliabue E (elda.tagliabue@istitutotumori.mi.it). PLoS One. 2013;8(2):e56761.
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