Somatic Cell Fusions Reveal Extensive Heterogeneity in Basal-like Breast Cancer.

Cell Rep
Authors
Keywords
Abstract

Basal-like and luminal breast tumors have distinct clinical behavior and molecular profiles, yet the underlying mechanisms are poorly defined. To interrogate processes that determine these distinct phenotypes and their inheritance pattern, we generated somatic cell fusions and performed integrated genetic and epigenetic (DNA methylation and chromatin) profiling. We found that the basal-like trait is generally dominant and is largely defined by epigenetic repression of luminal transcription factors. Definition of super-enhancers highlighted a core program common in luminal cells but a high degree of heterogeneity in basal-like breast cancers that correlates with clinical outcome. We also found that protein extracts of basal-like cells are sufficient to induce a luminal-to-basal phenotypic switch, implying a trigger of basal-like autoregulatory circuits. We determined that KDM6A might be required for luminal-basal fusions, and we identified EN1, TBX18, and TCF4 as candidate transcriptional regulators of the luminal-to-basal switch. Our findings highlight the remarkable epigenetic plasticity of breast cancer cells.

Year of Publication
2015
Journal
Cell Rep
Volume
11
Issue
10
Pages
1549-63
Date Published
2015 Jun 16
ISSN
2211-1247
URL
DOI
10.1016/j.celrep.2015.05.011
PubMed ID
26051943
Links