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Nucleotide excision repair deficiency is intrinsic in sporadic stage I breast cancer.


ABSTRACT: The molecular etiology of breast cancer has proven to be remarkably complex. Most individual oncogenes are disregulated in only approximately 30% of breast tumors, indicating that either very few molecular alterations are common to the majority of breast cancers, or that they have not yet been identified. In striking contrast, we now show that 19 of 19 stage I breast tumors tested with the functional unscheduled DNA synthesis assay exhibited a significant deficiency of DNA nucleotide excision repair (NER) capacity relative to normal epithelial tissue from disease-free controls (n = 23). Loss of DNA repair capacity, including the complex, damage-comprehensive NER pathway, results in genomic instability, a hallmark of carcinogenesis. By microarray analysis, mRNA expression levels for 20 canonical NER genes were reduced in representative tumor samples versus normal. Significant reductions were observed in 19 of these genes analyzed by the more sensitive method of RNase protection. These results were confirmed at the protein level for five NER gene products. Taken together, these data suggest that NER deficiency may play an important role in the etiology of sporadic breast cancer, and that early-stage breast cancer may be intrinsically susceptible to genotoxic chemotherapeutic agents, such as cis-platinum, whose damage is remediated by NER. In addition, reduced NER capacity, or reduced expression of NER genes, could provide a basis for the development of biomarkers for the identification of tumorigenic breast epithelium.

SUBMITTER: Latimer JJ 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC3003008 | biostudies-literature | 2010 Dec

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

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Nucleotide excision repair deficiency is intrinsic in sporadic stage I breast cancer.

Latimer Jean J JJ   Johnson Jennifer M JM   Kelly Crystal M CM   Miles Tiffany D TD   Beaudry-Rodgers Kelly A KA   Lalanne Nancy A NA   Vogel Victor G VG   Kanbour-Shakir Amal A   Kelley Joseph L JL   Johnson Ronald R RR   Grant Stephen G SG  

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 20101130 50


The molecular etiology of breast cancer has proven to be remarkably complex. Most individual oncogenes are disregulated in only approximately 30% of breast tumors, indicating that either very few molecular alterations are common to the majority of breast cancers, or that they have not yet been identified. In striking contrast, we now show that 19 of 19 stage I breast tumors tested with the functional unscheduled DNA synthesis assay exhibited a significant deficiency of DNA nucleotide excision re  ...[more]

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