Abstract

BackgroundInflammatory breast cancer (IBC) is the most aggressive form of locally-advanced breast cancer. Identification of new therapeutic targets is crucial. We previously reported MARCKS mRNA overexpression in IBC in the largest transcriptomics study reported to date. Here, we compared MARCKS protein expression in IBC and non-IBC samples, and searched for correlations between protein expression and clinicopathological features.ResultsTumor samples showed heterogeneity with respect to MARCKS staining: 18% were scored as MARCKS-positive (stained cells ≥ 1%) and 82% as MARCKS-negative. MARCKS expression was more frequent in IBC (36%) than in non-IBC (11%; p = 1.4E−09), independently from molecular subtypes and other clinicopathological variables. We found a positive correlation between protein and mRNA expression in the 148/502 samples previously analyzed for MARCKS mRNA expression. MARCKS protein expression was associated with other poor-prognosis features in the whole series of samples such as clinical axillary lymph node or metastatic extension, high pathological grade, ER-negativity, PR-negativity, HER2-positivity, and triple-negative and HER2+ statutes. In IBC, MARCKS expression was the sole tested variable associated with poor MFS.Materials and MethodsWe retrospectively analyzed MARCKS protein expression by immunohistochemistry in 502 tumors, including 133 IBC and 369 non-IBC, from Tunisian and French patients. All samples were pre-therapeutic clinical samples. We searched for correlations between MARCKS expression and clinicopathological features including the IBC versus non-IBC phenotype and metastasis-free survival (MFS).ConclusionsMARCKS overexpression might in part explain the poor prognosis of IBC. As an oncogene associated with poor MFS, MARCKS might represent a new potential therapeutic target in IBC.

Highlights

  • Inflammatory breast cancer (IBC) is the most aggressive form of locally-advanced breast cancer

  • We found a positive correlation between protein and mRNA expression in the 148/502 samples previously analyzed for MARCKS mRNA expression

  • MARCKS overexpression might in part explain the poor prognosis of IBC

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Summary

Introduction

Inflammatory breast cancer (IBC) is the most aggressive form of locally-advanced breast cancer. IBC is associated with a high metastatic propensity, and despite the introduction of multimodality treatment, the 5-year survival remains around 50%, inferior to that observed in non-IBC. IBC differs from non-IBC at many other levels. IBC is more frequent in geographic areas such as North Africa [1, 2]. IBCs are more frequently than non-IBC associated with ductal type, axillary lymph node invasion, high grade, ER and PR-negativity and HER2-positivity. Higher incidence of certain alterations has been reported in IBC, such as EGFR overexpression, TP53 mutations, high proliferation and angiogenesis levels, and overexpression of E-cadherin and eIFG4I (see [3] for review). We compared MARCKS protein expression in IBC and non-IBC samples, and searched for correlations between protein expression and clinicopathological features

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