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Breast tumor copy number aberration phenotypes and genomic instability

Jane Fridlyand, Antoine M. Snijders, Bauke Ylstra, Hua Li, Adam B. Olshen, Richard Segraves, Shanaz H. Dairkee, Taku A. Tokuyasu, Britt‐Marie Ljung, Ajay N. Jain, Jane McLennan, John L. Ziegler, Koei Chin, Sandy DeVries, Heidi S. Feiler

BMC Cancer · 2006 · ▲ 295 citations

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Genomic DNA copy number aberrations are frequent in solid tumors, although the underlying causes of chromosomal instability in tumors remain obscure. Genes likely to have genomic instability phenotypes when mutated (e.g. those involved in mitosis, replication, repair, and telomeres) are rarely mutated in chromosomally unstable sporadic tumors, even though such mutations are associated with some heritable cancer prone syndromes. METHODS: We applied array comparative genomic hybridization (CGH) to the analysis of breast tumors. The variation in the levels of genomic instability amongst tumors prompted us to investigate whether alterations in processes/genes involved in maintenance and/or manipulation of the genome were associated with particular types of genomic instability. RESULTS: We discriminated three breast tumor subtypes based on genomic DNA copy number alterations. The subtypes varied with respect to level of genomic instability. We find that shorter telomeres and altered telomere(definition) related gene expression are associated with amplification, implicating telomere attrition as a promoter of this type of aberration in breast cancer. On the other hand, the numbers of chromosomal alterations, particularly low level changes, are associated with altered expression of genes in other functional classes (mitosis, cell cycle, DNA replication and repair). Further, although loss of function instability phenotypes have been demonstrated for many of the genes in model systems, we observed enhanced expression of most genes in tumors, indicating that over expression, rather than deficiency underlies instability. CONCLUSION: Many of the genes associated with higher frequency of copy number aberrations are direct targets of E2F, supporting the hypothesis that deregulation of the Rb pathway is a major contributor to chromosomal instability in breast tumors. These observations are consistent with failure to find mutations in sporadic tumors in genes that have roles in maintenance or manipulation of the genome.

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OpenAlex
DOI
10.1186/1471-2407-6-96
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2026-06-09 MST

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APA
Fridlyand, J., Snijders, A.M., Ylstra, B., Li, H., Olshen, A.B., Segraves, R., Dairkee, S.H., Tokuyasu, T.A., Ljung, B., Jain, A.N., McLennan, J., Ziegler, J.L., Chin, K., DeVries, S., Feiler, H.S., Gray, J.W., Waldman, F.M., Pinkel, D., &amp; Albertson, D.G. (2006). Breast tumor copy number aberration phenotypes and genomic instability. <em>BMC Cancer</em>. https://doi.org/10.1186/1471-2407-6-96
Vancouver
Fridlyand J, Snijders AM, Ylstra B, Li H, Olshen AB, Segraves R, et al. Breast tumor copy number aberration phenotypes and genomic instability. BMC Cancer. 2006. doi:10.1186/1471-2407-6-96.
BibTeX
@article{jane2006Breast, title = {Breast tumor copy number aberration phenotypes and genomic instability}, author = {Jane Fridlyand and Antoine M. Snijders and Bauke Ylstra and Hua Li and Adam B. Olshen and Richard Segraves and Shanaz H. Dairkee and Taku A. Tokuyasu and Britt‐Marie Ljung and Ajay N. Jain and Jane McLennan and John L. Ziegler and Koei Chin and Sandy DeVries and Heidi S. Feiler and Joe W. Gray and Frederic M. Waldman and Daniel Pinkel and Donna G. Albertson}, journal = {BMC Cancer}, year = {2006}, doi = {10.1186/1471-2407-6-96}, }

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