Discovery of a glucocorticoid receptor (GR) activity signature using selective GR antagonism in ER-negative breast cancer.
By: Diana Christine West, Masha Kocherginsky, Eva Y Tonsing-Carter, Deniz Nesli Dolcen, David J Hosfield, Ricardo R Lastra, Jason P Sinnwell, Kevin J Thompson, Kathleen R Bowie, Ryan V Harkless, Maxwell N Skor, Charles F Pierce, Sarah C Styke, Caroline R Kim, Larischa de Wet, Geoffrey L Greene, Judy C Boughey, Matthew P Goetz, Krishna R Kalari, Liewei Wang, Gini F Fleming, Balázs Győrffy, Suzanne D Conzen

Department of Chemistry and Physics (Ave Maria University) and Department of Medicine (The University of Chicago), Ave Maria University and The University of Chicago.
2018-04-04; doi: 10.1158/1078-0432.CCR-17-2793
Abstract

Purpose

Although high glucocorticoid receptor (GR) expression in early-stage estrogen receptor (ER)-negative breast cancer (BC) is associated with shortened relapse-free survival (RFS), how associated GR transcriptional activity contributes to aggressive BC behavior is not well understood. Using potent GR antagonists and primary tumor gene expression data, we sought to identify a tumor-relevant gene signature based on GR activity that would be more predictive than GR expression alone.

Experimental

Global gene expression and GR ChIP-sequencing were performed to identify GR-regulated genes inhibited by two chemically distinct GR antagonists, mifepristone and CORT108297. Differentially expressed genes from MDA-MB-231 cells were cross-evaluated with significantly expressed genes in GR-high versus GR-low ER-negative primary BCs. The resulting subset of GR targeted genes was analyzed in two independent ER-negative BC cohorts to derive and then validate the GR activity signature (GRsig).

Results

Gene expression pathway analysis of glucocorticoid-regulated genes (inhibited by GR antagonism) revealed cell survival and invasion functions. GR ChIP-seq analysis demonstrated that GR antagonists decreased GR chromatin association for a subset of genes. A GRsig comprised of n=74 GR activation-associated genes (also reversed by GR antagonists) was derived from an adjuvant chemotherapy-treated Discovery cohort and found to predicted probability of relapse in a separate Validation cohort (HR=1.9; p= 0.012).

Conclusions

 The GRsig discovered herein identifies high-risk ER-negative/GR-positive BCs most likely to relapse despite administration of adjuvant chemotherapy. Because GR antagonism can reverse expression of these genes, we propose that addition of a GR antagonist to chemotherapy may improve outcome of these high-risk patients.



Copyright ©2018, American Association for Cancer Research.

PMID:29636357






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