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POLRMT as a Novel Susceptibility Gene for Cardiotoxicity in Epirubicin Treatment of Breast Cancer Patients

Authors :
Hans Wildiers
Teresa Lopez-Fernandez
Belen Herraez
Anna González-Neira
Sigrid Hatse
Danielle Delombaerde
Christof Vulsteke
Thomas Van Brussel
M. Rosario Alonso
Nuria Alvarez
Diether Lambrechts
Guillermo Pita
Alejandro Velasco-Ruiz
Rocío Núñez-Torres
Pilar Zamora
Source :
Pharmaceutics, Pharmaceutics, Vol 13, Iss 1942, p 1942 (2021), Volume 13, Issue 11
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
MDPI, 2021.

Abstract

Anthracyclines are among the most used chemotherapeutic agents in breast cancer (BC). However their use is hampered by anthracycline-induced cardiotoxicity (AIC). The currently known clinical and genetic risk factors do not fully explain the observed inter-individual variability and only have a limited ability to predict which patients are more likely to develop this severe toxicity. To identify novel predictive genes, we conducted a two-stage genome-wide association study in epirubicin-treated BC patients. In the discovery phase, we genotyped over 700,000 single nucleotide variants in a cohort of 227 patients. The most interesting finding was rs62134260, located 4kb upstream of POLRMT (OR = 5.76, P = 2.23 × 10-5). We replicated this association in a validation cohort of 123 patients (P = 0.021). This variant regulates the expression of POLRMT, a gene that encodes a mitochondrial DNA-directed RNA polymerase, responsible for mitochondrial gene expression. Individuals harbouring the risk allele had a decreased expression of POLRMT in heart tissue that may cause an impaired capacity to maintain a healthy mitochondrial population in cardiomyocytes under stressful conditions, as is treatment with epirubicin. This finding suggests a novel molecular mechanism involved in the development of AIC and may improve our ability to predict patients who are at risk. ispartof: PHARMACEUTICS vol:13 issue:11 ispartof: location:Switzerland status: published

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
19994923
Volume :
13
Issue :
11
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Pharmaceutics
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....f6a3d60076760e9a9d5c301c3acf86f2