DNA methylation of oestrogen-regulated enhancers defines endocrine sensitivity in breast cancer
Expression of oestrogen receptor (ESR1) determines whether a breast cancer patient receives endocrine therapy, but does not guarantee patient response. The molecular factors that define endocrine response in ESR1-positive breast cancer patients remain poorly understood. Here we characterize the DNA...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Nature communications 2015-07, Vol.6 (1), p.7758-7758, Article 7758 |
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Zusammenfassung: | Expression of oestrogen receptor (ESR1) determines whether a breast cancer patient receives endocrine therapy, but does not guarantee patient response. The molecular factors that define endocrine response in ESR1-positive breast cancer patients remain poorly understood. Here we characterize the DNA methylome of endocrine sensitivity and demonstrate the potential impact of differential DNA methylation on endocrine response in breast cancer. We show that DNA hypermethylation occurs predominantly at oestrogen-responsive enhancers and is associated with reduced ESR1 binding and decreased gene expression of key regulators of ESR1 activity, thus providing a novel mechanism by which endocrine response is abated in ESR1-positive breast cancers. Conversely, we delineate that ESR1-responsive enhancer hypomethylation is critical in transition from normal mammary epithelial cells to endocrine-responsive ESR1-positive cancer. Cumulatively, these novel insights highlight the potential of ESR1-responsive enhancer methylation to both predict ESR1-positive disease and stratify ESR1-positive breast cancer patients as responders to endocrine therapy.
The molecular factors influencing patient response to endocrine therapy are poorly understood. Here Stone
et al.
characterize the DNA methylome of endocrine response and show that methylation of oestrogen receptor-associated enhancers underpins endocrine sensitivity in human breast cancer. |
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ISSN: | 2041-1723 2041-1723 |
DOI: | 10.1038/ncomms8758 |