Patterns of Relative Telomere Length is Associated With hTERT Gene Expression in the Tissue of Patients With Breast Cancer.
By: Karuvaje Thriveni, Anisha Raju, Rekha V Kumar, Swamyvelu Krishnamurthy, Ramesh Chaluvarayaswamy

Department of Biochemistry, Kidwai Cancer Institute, Bangalore, India. Electronic address: thrivenibhat@yahoo.com.
2018-05-26; doi: 10.1016/j.clbc.2018.07.021
Abstract

Background

Homeostasis of telomere in breast cancer might be altered as a result of cumulative effects of various factors causing genomic instability and affecting prognosis. This study aimed to compare the relative telomere length (RTL) and hTERT mRNA expression in the tissue of patients with breast cancer along with the clinicopathologic parameters.

Patients

Frozen tumor tissues and adjacent normal breast tissue from 98 patients with invasive ductal breast cancer were used for the analysis. RTL and hTERT mRNA expression were measured using quantitative real time polymerase chain reaction.

Results

Among the 98 cases, 51% had an early-stage carcinoma, 66% were tumor size < 5 cm, 30% were node-negative, and 20% were low-grade tumors. In this study, 63% of cases showed higher hTERT gene expression with an odds ratio of 2.77 (P = .02). The median RTL for elongated telomere was 3.49, and the value was significantly elevated when compared with the shorter telomere. Shortened RTL was present in 60% of early-stage cancer cases, 55% where the tumor size was < 5 cm, 72% of the lymph node-negative cases, and 68% of low-grade carcinoma. Significantly elongated RTL, with median 4.22, 3.19, 3.17, and 3.28 was observed (P < .05) in the advanced stage, larger tumor size, node-positive, and high-grade cases respectively.

Conclusion

In this study, shortened telomere was observed in early-stage cancer, and elongated telomere was found in advanced diseases. However, 13% of patients with lower hTERT gene expression showed elongated telomeres, indicating relative telomere length measurement in tissue is different from blood leukocyte, showing the dynamic process of tumorigenesis in tissue.



Copyright © 2018 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

PMID:30217473






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