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DNA double-strand break repair genes and oxidative damage in brain metastasis of breast cancer.

Authors :
Woditschka S
Evans L
Duchnowska R
Reed LT
Palmieri D
Qian Y
Badve S
Sledge G Jr
Gril B
Aladjem MI
Fu H
Flores NM
Gökmen-Polar Y
Biernat W
Szutowicz-Zielińska E
Mandat T
Trojanowski T
Och W
Czartoryska-Arlukowicz B
Jassem J
Mitchell JB
Steeg PS
Source :
Journal of the National Cancer Institute [J Natl Cancer Inst] 2014 Jun 19; Vol. 106 (7). Date of Electronic Publication: 2014 Jun 19 (Print Publication: 2014).
Publication Year :
2014

Abstract

Background: Breast cancer frequently metastasizes to the brain, colonizing a neuro-inflammatory microenvironment. The molecular pathways facilitating this colonization remain poorly understood.<br />Methods: Expression profiling of 23 matched sets of human resected brain metastases and primary breast tumors by two-sided paired t test was performed to identify brain metastasis-specific genes. The implicated DNA repair genes BARD1 and RAD51 were modulated in human (MDA-MB-231-BR) and murine (4T1-BR) brain-tropic breast cancer cell lines by lentiviral transduction of cDNA or short hairpin RNA (shRNA) coding sequences. Their functional contribution to brain metastasis development was evaluated in mouse xenograft models (n = 10 mice per group).<br />Results: Human brain metastases overexpressed BARD1 and RAD51 compared with either matched primary tumors (1.74-fold, P < .001; 1.46-fold, P < .001, respectively) or unlinked systemic metastases (1.49-fold, P = .01; 1.44-fold, P = .008, respectively). Overexpression of either gene in MDA-MB-231-BR cells increased brain metastases by threefold to fourfold after intracardiac injections, but not lung metastases upon tail-vein injections. In 4T1-BR cells, shRNA-mediated RAD51 knockdown reduced brain metastases by 2.5-fold without affecting lung metastasis development. In vitro, BARD1- and RAD51-overexpressing cells showed reduced genomic instability but only exhibited growth and colonization phenotypes upon DNA damage induction. Reactive oxygen species were present in tumor cells and elevated in the metastatic neuro-inflammatory microenvironment and could provide an endogenous source of genotoxic stress. Tempol, a brain-permeable oxygen radical scavenger suppressed brain metastasis promotion induced by BARD1 and RAD51 overexpression.<br />Conclusions: BARD1 and RAD51 are frequently overexpressed in brain metastases from breast cancer and may constitute a mechanism to overcome reactive oxygen species-mediated genotoxic stress in the metastatic brain.<br /> (Published by Oxford University Press 2014.)

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1460-2105
Volume :
106
Issue :
7
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Journal of the National Cancer Institute
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
24948741
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1093/jnci/dju145