Abstract

Abstract The disparity in breast cancer burden of African Americans compared with European Americans is one of the most revealing instances in oncology associated with ethnicity. Recent studies demonstrated that there were highly intratumoral genetic heterogeneity and increased the frequency of basal subtypes among African Americans than European Americans. Because significant race-based disparities in breast cancer patients with hormone-receptor positive still persistent even after reflecting socio-economic status, there may be substantial roles playing by intrinsic biological factors contributing to the disparities. Transcriptional regulation governed by estrogen receptor plays critical roles in major changes in chromatin landscape that facilitate the assembly of other transcriptional complexes affecting mammary tumor initiation and proliferation. We investigated the estrogen receptor and its essential pioneer transcription factors how their expressions are associated with racial disparity with their prognostic significance. Co-expression analysis of estrogen receptor and its pioneer transcription factors suggest that ER-positive patients of women of European ancestry show much more favorable survival than women of African ancestry. Differential comparison of protein expression integrated with network-level gene expression analysis reveals significant differences in the predictive ability of the luminal master regulators based on race and survival. Moreover, we identified genes in the downstream of these master regulators that are highly correlated with race and survival. The comparative analysis of the predictive value of race-based cutoffs suggests that these master regulators of luminal differentiation have reduced transcriptional activity in the downstream regulatory network pathways in African ancestry. Functional characterization of the luminal master regulators and their downstream pathways may provide a better understanding of the intrinsic mechanisms that drive racial disparities in breast cancer survival. Citation Format: Jung S. Byun, Sandeep Singhal, Samson Park, Dae IK Yi, Ambar Caban, Nasreen Vohra, Eliseo J. Perez-Stable, Anna Napoles, Kevin L. Gardner. Transcription regulatory networks associated with luminal master regulator expression and breast cancer survival [abstract]. In: Proceedings of the American Association for Cancer Research Annual Meeting 2019; 2019 Mar 29-Apr 3; Atlanta, GA. Philadelphia (PA): AACR; Cancer Res 2019;79(13 Suppl):Abstract nr 5220.

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