
Gene expression comparison between primary triple‐negative breast cancer and paired axillary and sentinel lymph node metastasis
Author(s) -
Srour Marissa K.,
Gao Bowen,
Dadmanesh Farnaz,
Carlson Kjirsten,
Qu Ying,
Deng Nan,
Cui Xiaojiang,
Giuliano Armando E.
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
the breast journal
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.533
H-Index - 72
eISSN - 1524-4741
pISSN - 1075-122X
DOI - 10.1111/tbj.13684
Subject(s) - triple negative breast cancer , cancer research , metastasis , breast cancer , downregulation and upregulation , medicine , mmp2 , primary tumor , cancer , biology , gene , genetics
Few studies examine the genomics of axillary lymph node (ALN) metastasis in triple‐negative breast cancer (TNBC). The aim was to characterize and compare gene expression patterns of primary breast cancers and paired ALN metastases. Patients with stage 2‐3 ER/PR negative, HER2 negative TNBC with ALN macrometastasis without neo‐adjuvant therapy were selected. Tumor‐specific area was isolated from breast and ALN tissue sections. Gene expression of 2567 cancer‐associated genes was analyzed with the HTG EdgeSeq system coupled with Illumina next‐generation sequencing (NGS). Seventeen pairs of TNBC and autologous ALN metastasis were analyzed. Compared with the primary, ALN metastasis had 257 statistically significant differentially expressed genes, including 123 upregulated genes and 134 downregulated genes. Notably, there was an upregulation of anti‐apoptosis and survival signaling genes (BIRC3, TCL1A, FLT3, and VCAM1) in the ALN metastasis. There was also an upregulation of chemotaxis genes (CCL19, CCL21, CXCL13, and TNFSF11). The most striking feature is the downregulation of genes known to regulate cell microenvironment interaction (MMP2, MMP 3, MMP 7, MMP 11, MMP14, COL1A1, COL1A2, COL3A1, COL5A1, COL5A2, COL6A6, COL11A1, and COL17A1). In TNBC, ALN metastases have a distinct gene expression profile. Genes associated with anti‐apoptosis, survival responses, and chemotaxis are upregulated, and genes associated with regulation of extracellular matrix are downregulated when compared to autologous primary cancer. TNBC cells metastatic to lymph nodes undergo a change in order to metastasize and survive in the new microenvironment, which may lead to insights into the metastatic process.