Published April 3, 2014 | Version v1
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Integrative "Omic" Analysis for Tamoxifen Sensitivity through Cell Based Models

Description

It has long been observed that tamoxifen sensitivity varies among breast cancer patients. Further, ethnic differences of tamoxifen therapy between Caucasian and African American have also been reported. Since most studies have been focused on Caucasian people, we sought to comprehensively evaluate genetic variants related to tamoxifen therapy in African-derived samples. An integrative "omic" approach developed by our group was used to investigate relationships among endoxifen (an active metabolite of tamoxifen) sensitivity, SNP genotype, mRNA and microRNA expressions in 58 HapMap YRI lymphoblastoid cell lines. We identified 50 SNPs that associate with cellular sensitivity to endoxifen through their effects on 34 genes and 30 microRNA expression. Some of these findings are shared in both Caucasian and African samples, while others are unique in the African samples. Among gene/microRNA that were identified in both ethnic groups, the expression of TRAF1 is also correlated with tamoxifen sensitivity in a collection of 44 breast cancer cell lines. Further, knock-down TRAF1 and over-expression of hsa-let-7i confirmed the roles of hsa-let-7i and TRAF1 in increasing tamoxifen sensitivity in the ZR-75-1 breast cancer cell line. Our integrative omic analysis facilitated the discovery of pharmacogenomic biomarkers that potentially affect tamoxifen sensitivity.

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Additional details

Identifiers

DOI
10.1371/journal.pone.0093420
Other
oai:uchicago.tind.io:10721

Funding

University of Chicago
Cancer Center Support Grant
National Institute of General Medical Science
Pharmacogenomics of Anticancer Agents grant
National Institute of General Medical Science
GM089941
National Cancer Institute
CA139278
University of Chicago
Breast Cancer SPORE Career Development Award
National Center for Advancing Translational Sciences
UL1RR024999

UChicago Information

Division(s)
Biological Sciences Division
Department(s)
Medicine