Ancestry as a potential modifier of gene expression in breast tumors from Colombian women

Hispanic/Latino populations are a genetically admixed and heterogeneous group, with variable fractions of European, Indigenous American and African ancestries. The molecular profile of breast cancer has been widely described in non-Hispanic Whites but equivalent knowledge is lacking in Hispanic/Lati...

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Veröffentlicht in:PloS one 2017-08, Vol.12 (8), p.e0183179-e0183179
Hauptverfasser: Serrano-Gómez, Silvia J, Sanabria-Salas, María Carolina, Garay, Jone, Baddoo, Melody C, Hernández-Suarez, Gustavo, Mejía, Juan Carlos, García, Oscar, Miele, Lucio, Fejerman, Laura, Zabaleta, Jovanny
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Hispanic/Latino populations are a genetically admixed and heterogeneous group, with variable fractions of European, Indigenous American and African ancestries. The molecular profile of breast cancer has been widely described in non-Hispanic Whites but equivalent knowledge is lacking in Hispanic/Latinas. We have previously reported that the most prevalent breast cancer intrinsic subtype in Colombian women was Luminal B as defined by St. Gallen 2013 criteria. In this study we explored ancestry-associated differences in molecular profiles of Luminal B tumors among these highly admixed women. We performed whole-transcriptome RNA-seq analysis in 42 Luminal tumors (21 Luminal A and 21 Luminal B) from Colombian women. Genetic ancestry was estimated from a panel of 80 ancestry-informative markers (AIM). We categorized patients according to Luminal subtype and to the proportion of European and Indigenous American ancestry and performed differential expression analysis comparing Luminal B against Luminal A tumors according to the assigned ancestry groups. We found 5 genes potentially modulated by genetic ancestry: ERBB2 (log2FC = 2.367, padj
ISSN:1932-6203
1932-6203
DOI:10.1371/journal.pone.0183179