Telomerase Activity and Genetic Alterations in Primary Breast Carcinomas

It has been proposed that the structural and numerical chromosome abnormalities recorded in breast cancer could be the result of telomere dysfunction and that telomerase is activated de novo to provide a survival mechanism curtailing further chromosomal aberrations. However, recent in vivo and in v...

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Main Authors: Anna Papadopoulou, Theoni Trangas, Manuel R. Teixeira, Sverre Heim, Euthimios Dimitriadis, Haroula Tsarouha, Johan A. Andersen, Evangelos Evangelo, Panayiotis Ioannidis, Niki J. Agnantis, Nikos Pandis
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2003-03-01
Series:Neoplasia: An International Journal for Oncology Research
Subjects:
CGH
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S147655860380009X
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spelling doaj-8baef73753d04adb9d90dff571165fd62020-11-24T21:04:22ZengElsevierNeoplasia: An International Journal for Oncology Research1476-55861522-80022003-03-015217017810.1016/S1476-5586(03)80009-XTelomerase Activity and Genetic Alterations in Primary Breast CarcinomasAnna Papadopoulou0Theoni Trangas1Manuel R. Teixeira2Sverre Heim3Euthimios Dimitriadis4Haroula Tsarouha5Johan A. Andersen6Evangelos Evangelo7Panayiotis Ioannidis8Niki J. Agnantis9Nikos Pandis10Department of Genetics, Saint Savas Hospital, Athens, GreeceDepartment of Genetics, Saint Savas Hospital, Athens, GreeceDepartment of Genetics, Portuguese Oncology Institute, Porto, PortugalDepartment of Cancer Genetics, The Norwegian Radium Hospital, Oslo, NorwayDepartment of Genetics, Saint Savas Hospital, Athens, GreeceDepartment of Genetics, Saint Savas Hospital, Athens, GreeceDepartment of Pathology, Odense University Hospital, Odense, DenmarkDepartment of Public Health, School of Nursing, University of Athens, Athens, GreeceDepartment of Genetics, Saint Savas Hospital, Athens, GreeceDepartment of Pathology, Medical School, Ioannina, GreeceDepartment of Genetics, Saint Savas Hospital, Athens, Greece It has been proposed that the structural and numerical chromosome abnormalities recorded in breast cancer could be the result of telomere dysfunction and that telomerase is activated de novo to provide a survival mechanism curtailing further chromosomal aberrations. However, recent in vivo and in vitro data show that the ectopic expression of telomerase promotes tumorigenesis via a telomere length-independent mechanism. In this study, the relation between telomerase expression and the extent of chromosomal aberrations was investigated in 62 primary breast carcinomas. Telomerase activity was measured using a polymerase chain reaction-based telomeric repeat amplification protocol assay and 92% of the tumors were found to express telomerase with a relative activity ranging from 0 to 3839.6. Genetic alterations were determined by G-banding and comparative genomic hybridization analysis and 97% of the tumors exhibited chromosomal aberrations ranging from 0 to 44 (average: 10.98). In the overall series, the relationship between telomerase activity levels and genetic changes could be best described by a quadratic model, whereas in tumors with below-average genetic alteration numbers, a significant positive association was recorded between the two variables (coefficient=0.374, P= .017). The relationship between telomerase activity levels and the extent of genetic alteration may reflect the complex effect of telomerase activation upon tumor progression in breast carcinomas. http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S147655860380009Xtelomerasegenetic alterationsbreast cancerCGHcytogenetics
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Anna Papadopoulou
Theoni Trangas
Manuel R. Teixeira
Sverre Heim
Euthimios Dimitriadis
Haroula Tsarouha
Johan A. Andersen
Evangelos Evangelo
Panayiotis Ioannidis
Niki J. Agnantis
Nikos Pandis
spellingShingle Anna Papadopoulou
Theoni Trangas
Manuel R. Teixeira
Sverre Heim
Euthimios Dimitriadis
Haroula Tsarouha
Johan A. Andersen
Evangelos Evangelo
Panayiotis Ioannidis
Niki J. Agnantis
Nikos Pandis
Telomerase Activity and Genetic Alterations in Primary Breast Carcinomas
Neoplasia: An International Journal for Oncology Research
telomerase
genetic alterations
breast cancer
CGH
cytogenetics
author_facet Anna Papadopoulou
Theoni Trangas
Manuel R. Teixeira
Sverre Heim
Euthimios Dimitriadis
Haroula Tsarouha
Johan A. Andersen
Evangelos Evangelo
Panayiotis Ioannidis
Niki J. Agnantis
Nikos Pandis
author_sort Anna Papadopoulou
title Telomerase Activity and Genetic Alterations in Primary Breast Carcinomas
title_short Telomerase Activity and Genetic Alterations in Primary Breast Carcinomas
title_full Telomerase Activity and Genetic Alterations in Primary Breast Carcinomas
title_fullStr Telomerase Activity and Genetic Alterations in Primary Breast Carcinomas
title_full_unstemmed Telomerase Activity and Genetic Alterations in Primary Breast Carcinomas
title_sort telomerase activity and genetic alterations in primary breast carcinomas
publisher Elsevier
series Neoplasia: An International Journal for Oncology Research
issn 1476-5586
1522-8002
publishDate 2003-03-01
description It has been proposed that the structural and numerical chromosome abnormalities recorded in breast cancer could be the result of telomere dysfunction and that telomerase is activated de novo to provide a survival mechanism curtailing further chromosomal aberrations. However, recent in vivo and in vitro data show that the ectopic expression of telomerase promotes tumorigenesis via a telomere length-independent mechanism. In this study, the relation between telomerase expression and the extent of chromosomal aberrations was investigated in 62 primary breast carcinomas. Telomerase activity was measured using a polymerase chain reaction-based telomeric repeat amplification protocol assay and 92% of the tumors were found to express telomerase with a relative activity ranging from 0 to 3839.6. Genetic alterations were determined by G-banding and comparative genomic hybridization analysis and 97% of the tumors exhibited chromosomal aberrations ranging from 0 to 44 (average: 10.98). In the overall series, the relationship between telomerase activity levels and genetic changes could be best described by a quadratic model, whereas in tumors with below-average genetic alteration numbers, a significant positive association was recorded between the two variables (coefficient=0.374, P= .017). The relationship between telomerase activity levels and the extent of genetic alteration may reflect the complex effect of telomerase activation upon tumor progression in breast carcinomas.
topic telomerase
genetic alterations
breast cancer
CGH
cytogenetics
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S147655860380009X
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