How BRCA1 mutations cause Breast Cancer
revealed for first time
Newswise — An international team of researchers led by
Columbia University Medical Center’s Herbert
Irving Comprehensive Cancer Center and
Sweden’s Lund University has, for the first
time, revealed how mutations in the BRCA1
gene lead to breast cancer. Findings show
that one way BRCA1 mutations cause cancer is
by knocking out a powerful tumor suppressor
gene known as PTEN.
The new study will be published online on the Nature
Genetics website on Dec. 9, 2007:
http://www.nature.com/ng. It will
appear in the January print issue of this
journal. The study was led by Ramon Parsons,
M.D., Ph.D., the Avon Foundation Professor
of Medicine and Pathology at Columbia
University College of Physicians and
Surgeons and Åke Borg, Ph.D., professor of
oncology at Lund University. The paper’s
first author was Lao Saal, Ph.D. (now
finishing his medical degree at Columbia
University College of Physicians and
Surgeons).
“These findings are exciting because ever since the link was
established between BRCA1 and breast cancer
more than 10 years ago, we have been
frustrated by our lack of understanding
about how mutations in this gene cause
breast cancer. We have been stymied by our
limited resources to treat these cancers,
which are associated with very poor
prognoses. Now that we know that PTEN is
involved, we finally have a target for
therapy for these cancers,” said Dr.
Parsons, the study’s corresponding author.
Dr. Parsons is director of the Avon Foundation Breast Cancer
Research Laboratory and director of the
Breast Cancer Program of the Herbert Irving
Comprehensive Cancer Center at Columbia
University Medical Center and NewYork-Presbyterian
Hospital.
In 1997, Dr. Parsons led one of the two teams that
independently discovered the PTEN, one of
the most important tumor suppressor genes
altered in breast cancer, as well as in
brain and prostate cancers. PTEN is now
recognized to be mutated in about 30 percent
of all cancers, making it the second most
mutated gene in cancer after p53. Knocking
out PTEN sends a strong pro-growth signal on
tumor cells. This is unlike the BRCA1
mutation, which only predisposes the cells
to accumulate genetic damage and sends an
indirect signal for cell growth. “Once a
cell loses PTEN, it has a growth advantage
over its neighbors and starts on the road to
cancer,” said Dr. Parsons.
PTEN mutations promote runaway tumor cell growth by
increasing the activity of a series of
different proteins in the cell known as the
PTEN/PI3K pathway. Shutting down any one of
those proteins could potentially stop growth
of the cancer. Investigational therapies to
shut down proteins in the PTEN pathway are
currently in Phase I clinical trials.
How the BRCA1 Mutation Mechanism Was Pinpointed
Dr. Parsons and his research team made the connection between
BRCA1 and PTEN using techniques to search
for physical chromosome breaks within the
PTEN gene – a technique that had never
before been used. Previous searches for PTEN
mutations in BRCA1 tumors had looked for
conventional mutations and failed to turn up
any abnormalities.
The researchers scanned 34 biopsies taken from women with
BRCA1 tumors. The PTEN gene had been split
in two, but inadequately repaired in about
one-third of the cancers. In some cases,
entire sections of the gene were missing; in
others, one-half of the gene was reattached
to other regions on the chromosome.
These types of large chromosomal mistakes stem directly from
the tumor’s lack of BRCA1, a gene that is
normally involved in the repair of such
damage. In breast cancers from women with
normal BRCA1, such large mutations in PTEN
were rarely detected.
Finding May Affect 50% of BRCA1 Breast Cancers & Lead to New
Treatments
Dr. Parsons estimates that about 50 percent of BRCA1 breast
cancers will be found to harbor mutated PTEN
once a complete analysis of chromosomal
mutations is done.
Breast cancer tumors caused by BRCA1 are known as basal-like
or triple-negative because these tumors
usually lack estrogen, progesterone, and
HER2 receptors, which are needed for most
breast cancer treatments to be effective.
Basal-like breast tumors are found in 10 to
20 percent of women with non-hereditary
breast cancer (meaning, not caused by a
genetic mutation in BRCA1 or another gene),
and the researchers found that PTEN is also
lost in the majority of these breast tumors
as well.
“Our results point to PTEN as a major player in both
hereditary and non-hereditary basal-like
breast cancer, a finding that may now be
exploited to develop new therapeutic
strategies to improve outcomes for women
with these aggressive tumors,” said Dr. Saal,
who at the time of the research, was a
fellow in Dr. Parsons’ Avon Foundation
Breast Cancer Research Laboratory.
The researchers also predict that other cancer genes besides
PTEN are targeted by BRCA1.
“By using the same techniques we used to find gross
chromosomal rearrangements in PTEN, we hope
to start identifying additional mutated
genes involved in the development of breast
cancer,” said Dr. Parsons.
“These kinds of mutations that break tumor suppressors in
half may turn out to be common in many kinds
of carcinomas, particularly those with
deficiencies in DNA repair pathways similar
to BRCA1, a question that only a systematic
search can answer,” said Dr. Saal.
“Similar research is underway in tumors from carriers of
germline mutations in BRCA2, the other known
major breast cancer susceptibility gene,”
said Dr. Borg. “BRCA2 has a role downstream
in the same DNA double strand break repair
pathway as BRCA1, but tumors from BRCA2
mutation carriers have a quite different
phenotype compared to BRCA1 tumors, less
often involving PTEN loss. However, like
BRCA1, BRCA2 tumors have an instable genome
with massive chromosomal aberrations,
suggesting that other genes may be
targeted.”
Breast Cancers Caused by BRCA1 Mutations are Especially
Lethal & Difficult to Treat
Basal-like breast cancer tumors, whether caused by BRCA1
mutations or of the non-hereditary type, are
among the most aggressive tumors – they grow
fast and spread quickly, making them more
likely than other types of cancer to be
fatal. These tumors are more likely to be
resistant to standard breast cancer
treatments, such as Tamoxifen or Herceptin,
making them especially difficult to treat.
As a result, many young BRCA1 carriers opt
to have their breasts prophylactically
removed instead of waiting for cancer to
appear.
Breast cancers caused by BRCA1 mutations tend to affect women
much earlier – often before menopause and
sometimes in their 20s and 30s – and between
60 and 80 percent of women who carry a BRCA1
mutation will develop breast cancer at some
point during their lives. BRCA1 mutation
carriers are most common among
African-American women and women of
Ashkenazi Jewish descent. Inherited BRCA1
(and BRCA2) mutations also predispose women
to ovarian cancer, a disease that frequently
escape early diagnosis and which has a fatal
outcome in advanced stages.
International Collaborations & Research
Support
Additional Columbia researchers involved in the study include
Hanina Hibshoosh, M.D., associate professor
of clinical pathology and Vundavalli Murty,
M.D., associate professor of pathology, and
others.
“Identifying these rearrangements would not have been
possible without the support of the shared
resources of the Herbert Irving
Comprehensive Cancer Center and our
collaboration with Drs. Borg, Saal,
Hibshoosh and Murty,” said Dr. Parsons.
This research was supported, in part, by the Avon Foundation,
the OctoberWoman Foundation, and the
National Cancer Institute and the Swedish
Cancer Society.
The Avon Foundation Breast Cancer Research Laboratory at
Columbia University Medical Center is a
state-of-the-art facility that aims to
better understand genetic pathways involved
in breast cancer, and how to control these
to prevent or stop the progression of
cancer. The laboratory is under the
leadership of Ramon Parsons, M.D., Ph.D.,
director of the Breast Cancer Program of the
Herbert Irving Comprehensive Cancer Center
of Columbia University Medical Center and
NewYork-Presbyterian Hospital.
The Herbert Irving Comprehensive Cancer Center at Columbia
University Medical Center and NewYork-Presbyterian
Hospital encompasses pre-clinical and
clinical research, treatment, prevention and
education efforts in cancer. The Cancer
Center was initially funded by the NCI in
1972 and became an NCI-designated
comprehensive cancer center in 1979. The
designation recognizes the Center’s
collaborative environment and expertise in
harnessing translational research to bridge
scientific discovery to clinical delivery,
with the ultimate goal of successfully
introducing novel diagnostic, therapeutic
and preventive approaches to cancer.
http://www.hiccc.columbia.edu/
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