npj Breast Cancer (Sep 2021)

Circadian PERformance in breast cancer: a germline and somatic genetic study of PER3 VNTR polymorphisms and gene co-expression

  • Jaume Fores-Martos,
  • Raimundo Cervera-Vidal,
  • Julia Sierra-Roca,
  • Carlos Lozano-Asencio,
  • Vita Fedele,
  • Sten Cornelissen,
  • Hege Edvarsen,
  • Irene Tadeo-Cervera,
  • Pilar Eroles,
  • Ana Lluch,
  • Rafa Tabares-Seisdedos,
  • Antonio Falcó,
  • Laura J. Van’t Veer,
  • Marjanka Schmidt,
  • David A. Quigley,
  • Anne-Lise Børresen-Dale,
  • Vessela N. Kristensen,
  • Allan Balmain,
  • Joan Climent

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41523-021-00329-2
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 7, no. 1
pp. 1 – 12

Abstract

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Abstract Polymorphisms in the PER3 gene have been associated with several human disease phenotypes, including sleep disorders and cancer. In particular, the long allele of a variable number of tandem repeat (VNTR) polymorphism has been previously linked to an increased risk of breast cancer. Here we carried out a combined germline and somatic genetic analysis of the role of the PER3 VNRT polymorphism in breast cancer. The combined data from 8284 individuals showed a non-significant trend towards increased breast cancer risk in the 5-repeat allele homozygous carriers (OR = 1.17, 95% CI: 0.97–1.42). We observed allelic imbalance at the PER3 locus in matched blood and tumor DNA samples, showing a significant retention of the long variant (risk) allele in tumor samples, and a preferential loss of the short repetition allele (p = 0.0005). Gene co-expression analysis in healthy and tumoral breast tissue samples uncovered significant associations between PER3 expression levels with those from genes which belong to several cancer-associated pathways. Finally, relapse-free survival (RFS) analysis showed that low expression levels of PER3 were linked to a significant lower RSF in luminal A (p = 3 × 10−12) but not in the rest of breast cancer subtypes.