Translational Oncology (Nov 2023)

An androgen receptor regulated gene score is associated with epithelial to mesenchymal transition features in triple negative breast cancers

  • Savitha Rajarajan,
  • V.P Snijesh,
  • C.E Anupama,
  • Madhumathy G Nair,
  • Apoorva D Mavatkar,
  • Chandrakala M Naidu,
  • Sharada Patil,
  • Vidya P Nimbalkar,
  • Annie Alexander,
  • Maalavika Pillai,
  • Mohit Kumar Jolly,
  • Radhakrishnan Sabarinathan,
  • Rakesh S Ramesh,
  • Srinath BS,
  • Jyothi S Prabhu

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 37
p. 101761

Abstract

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Background: Androgen receptor (AR) is considered a marker of better prognosis in hormone receptor positive breast cancers (BC), however, its role in triple negative breast cancer (TNBC) is controversial. This may be attributed to intrinsic molecular differences or scoring methods for AR positivity. We derived AR regulated gene score and examined its utility in BC subtypes. Methods: AR regulated genes were derived by applying a bioinformatic pipeline on publicly available microarray data sets of AR+ BC cell lines and gene score was calculated as average expression of six AR regulated genes. Tumors were divided into AR high and low based on gene score and associations with clinical parameters, circulating androgens, survival and epithelial to mesenchymal transition (EMT) markers were examined, further evaluated in invitro models and public datasets. Results: 53% (133/249) tumors were classified as AR gene score high and were associated with significantly better clinical parameters, disease-free survival (86.13 vs 72.69 months, log rank p = 0.032) when compared to AR low tumors. 36% of TNBC (N = 66) were AR gene score high with higher expression of EMT markers (p = 0.024) and had high intratumoral levels of 5α-reductase, enzyme involved in intracrine androgen metabolism. In MDA-MB-453 treated with dihydrotestosterone, SLUG expression increased, E-cadherin decreased with increase in migration and these changes were reversed with bicalutamide. Similar results were obtained in public datasets. Conclusion: Deciphering the role of AR in BC is difficult based on AR protein levels alone. Our results support the context dependent function of AR in driving better prognosis in ER positive tumors and EMT features in TNBC tumors.

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