Poor Outcome in Estrogen Receptor–Positive Breast Cancers Predicted by Loss of Plexin B1

A Rody, U Holtrich, R Gaetje, M Gehrmann… - Clinical cancer …, 2007 - AACR
A Rody, U Holtrich, R Gaetje, M Gehrmann, K Engels, G Von Minckwitz, S Loibl
Clinical cancer research, 2007AACR
Purpose: A common characteristic of mammary carcinomas is an inverse relationship
between the estrogen receptor (ER) status and the proliferative activity of the tumor. Yet, a
subset of ER-positive breast cancers is characterized by a high proliferation, suggesting
malfunctions in ER responsiveness that influence the biological and therapeutic behavior of
tumor cells. The expression of several ER-dependent genes seems to be dysregulated
among those “uncoupled” tumors. One of those genes is plexin B1, a cell-surface receptor …
Abstract
Purpose: A common characteristic of mammary carcinomas is an inverse relationship between the estrogen receptor (ER) status and the proliferative activity of the tumor. Yet, a subset of ER-positive breast cancers is characterized by a high proliferation, suggesting malfunctions in ER responsiveness that influence the biological and therapeutic behavior of tumor cells. The expression of several ER-dependent genes seems to be dysregulated among those “uncoupled” tumors. One of those genes is plexin B1, a cell-surface receptor for the semaphorin Sema4D (CD 100). However, the biological role of plexin B1 in breast cancer is largely unknown.
Experimental Design: Expression data of plexin B1 were obtained from Affymetrix microarray analysis of n = 119 breast cancer specimens. Validation was done by quantitative real-time PCR and protein expression was evaluated by immunohistochemistry. Expression data were compared with clinical characteristics as well as follow-up data of the disease.
Results: Low plexin B1 expression levels characterize a more aggressive tumor phenotype. The expression of plexin B1 is strongly correlated with the ER status. However, even among ER-positive tumors, loss of plexin B1 is associated with an impaired prognosis of breast cancer patients in both univariate (all patients, P = 0.0062; ER positive, P = 0.0107) and multivariate analyses (all patients, P = 0.032; ER positive, P = 0.022). Immunohistochemistry reveals that the tumor cells themselves and not the endothelial cells are the major source of plexin B1 expression in the tumor.
Conclusion: Plexin B1 acts not only as a new important prognostic but should also represent a predictive marker indicating an endocrine resistance. These data give a new insight in markers that could be involved in endocrine dysregulation of breast cancer.
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