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  • Genetic Ancestry-dependent Differences in Breast Cancer-induced Field Defects in the Tumor-adjacent Normal Breast.

Genetic Ancestry-dependent Differences in Breast Cancer-induced Field Defects in the Tumor-adjacent Normal Breast.

Clinical cancer research : an official journal of the American Association for Cancer Research (2019-02-06)
Harikrishna Nakshatri, Brijesh Kumar, Heather N Burney, Mary L Cox, Max Jacobsen, George E Sandusky, Crislyn D'Souza-Schorey, Anna Maria V Storniolo
초록

Genetic ancestry influences evolutionary pathways of cancers. However, whether ancestry influences cancer-induced field defects is unknown. The goal of this study was to utilize ancestry-mapped true normal breast tissues as controls to identify cancer-induced field defects in normal tissue adjacent to breast tumors (NATs) in women of African American (AA) and European (EA) ancestry. A tissue microarray comprising breast tissues of ancestry-mapped 100 age-matched healthy women from the Komen Tissue Bank (KTB) at Indiana University (Indianapolis, IN) and tumor-NAT pairs from 100 women (300 samples total) was analyzed for the levels of ZEB1, an oncogenic transcription factor that is central to cell fate, mature luminal cell-enriched estrogen receptor alpha (ERα), GATA3, FOXA1, and for immune cell composition. ZEB1+ cells, which were localized surrounding the ductal structures of the normal breast, were enriched in the KTB-normal of AA compared with KTB-normal of EA women. In contrast, in EA women, both NATs and tumors compared with KTB-normal contained higher levels of ZEB1+ cells. FOXA1 levels were lower in NATs compared with KTB-normal in AA but not in EA women. We also noted variations in the levels of GATA3, CD8+ T cells, PD1+ immune cells, and PDL1+ cell but not CD68+ macrophages in NATs of AA and EA women. ERα levels did not change in any of our analyses, pointing to the specificity of ancestry-dependent variations. Genetic ancestry-mapped tissues from healthy individuals are required for proper assessment and development of cancer-induced field defects as early cancer detection markers. This finding is significant in light of recent discoveries of influence of genetic ancestry on both normal biology and tumor evolution.