Abstract

Recent breast cancer studies have highlighted the importance of interactions between cancer epithelium and tumor stroma. Recently, the focus of solid tumor investigations has shifted from mutations in carcinomatous epithelium to disturbances of tissue organization in cancer. The genetic basis of this microenvironment, however, remains to be clarified. To begin to resolve this problem, a total genome loss of heterozygosity (LOH) scan was done on epithelial and stromal DNA from 134 sporadic invasive breast carcinomas. In addition to detecting more frequent LOH at three loci in stroma than in epithelium, we found strong evidence that LOH frequencies were significantly elevated in specific regions of each chromosome. We detected 57 markers, which were preferentially lost either in stroma (n = 38) or epithelium (n = 19), relative to the background LOH frequencies on their respective chromosomes. This multiplicity of stromal cell LOH, and hence loss of genetic material, provides a possible mechanism for interpatient variation in host-stromal response to invading adenocarcinoma cells. This is consistent with a model in which initial, random LOH occurs equally among epithelium and stroma, but subsequent clonal selection is driven by factors, which appear to be distinctly different between malignant epithelial and surrounding stromal cells. Genetic alterations in stroma did not mimic those in epithelium, but they could play a different and parallel role in carcinogenesis and tumor progression, probably by modifying some features specific to breast cancer.

Highlights

  • Breast cancer is the most common women’s cancer in the Western hemisphere, occurring in one in eight females

  • This possibility has been experimentally validated by several independent studies showing the presence of loss of heterozygosity (LOH) and somatic mutations of tumor suppressor genes such as PTEN and TP53 in tumor stroma (8 –12)

  • Using 381 markers across all chromosomes, ranging from 7 to 31 markers/ chromosome, 43,839 (22,409 for epithelium and 21,430 for stroma) PCR reactions were informative for evaluation of LOH

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Summary

Introduction

Breast cancer is the most common women’s cancer in the Western hemisphere, occurring in one in eight females. We used a 381-microsatellite marker whole genome LOH scan to analyze global genomic alterations between carcinomatous epithelium and tumor stroma from 134 sporadic invasive breast carcinoma samples.

Results
Conclusion

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