Identification of Alternative Splicing Markers for Breast Cancer

Julian P. Venables(Université de Sherbrooke), Roscoe Klinck(Université de Sherbrooke), Anne Bramard(Université de Sherbrooke), Lyna Inkel(Université de Sherbrooke), Geneviève Dufresne‐Martin(Université de Sherbrooke), ChuShin Koh(Université de Sherbrooke), Julien Gervais-Bird(Université de Sherbrooke), Elvy Lapointe(Université de Sherbrooke), Ulrike Froehlich(Université de Sherbrooke), Mathieu Durand(Université de Sherbrooke), Daniel Gendron(Université de Sherbrooke), Jean‐Philippe Brosseau(Université de Sherbrooke), Philippe Thibault(Université de Sherbrooke), Jean‐François Lucier(Université de Sherbrooke), Karine Tremblay(Université de Sherbrooke), Panagiotis Prinos(Université de Sherbrooke), Raymund J. Wellinger(Université de Sherbrooke), Benoı̂t Chabot(Université de Sherbrooke), Claudine Rancourt(Université de Sherbrooke), Sherif Abou Elela(Université de Sherbrooke)
Cancer Research
November 14, 2008
Cited by 193

Abstract

Breast cancer is the most common cause of cancer death among women under age 50 years, so it is imperative to identify molecular markers to improve diagnosis and prognosis of this disease. Here, we present a new approach for the identification of breast cancer markers that does not measure gene expression but instead uses the ratio of alternatively spliced mRNAs as its indicator. Using a high-throughput reverse transcription-PCR-based system for splicing annotation, we monitored the alternative splicing profiles of 600 cancer-associated genes in a panel of 21 normal and 26 cancerous breast tissues. We validated 41 alternative splicing events that significantly differed in breast tumors relative to normal breast tissues. Most cancer-specific changes in splicing that disrupt known protein domains support an increase in cell proliferation or survival consistent with a functional role for alternative splicing in cancer. In a blind screen, a classifier based on the 12 best cancer-associated splicing events correctly identified cancer tissues with 96% accuracy. Moreover, a subset of these alternative splicing events could order tissues according to histopathologic grade, and 5 markers were validated in a further blind set of 19 grade 1 and 19 grade 3 tumor samples. These results provide a simple alternative for the classification of normal and cancerous breast tumor tissues and underscore the putative role of alternative splicing in the biology of cancer.


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