Cancers (Feb 2023)

Sex- and Female Age-Dependent Differences in Gene Expression in Diffuse Large B-Cell Lymphoma—Possible Estrogen Effects

  • Dan Huang,
  • Mattias Berglund,
  • Anastasios Damdimopoulos,
  • Per Antonson,
  • Cecilia Lindskog,
  • Gunilla Enblad,
  • Rose-Marie Amini,
  • Sam Okret

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/cancers15041298
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 15, no. 4
p. 1298

Abstract

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For most lymphomas, including diffuse large B-cell lymphoma (DLBCL), the male incidence is higher, and the prognosis is worse compared to females. The reasons are unclear; however, epidemiological and experimental data suggest that estrogens are involved. With this in mind, we analyzed gene expression data from a publicly available cohort (EGAD00001003600) of 746 DLBCL samples based on RNA sequencing. We found 1293 genes to be differentially expressed between males and females (adj. p-value NR4A2 and MUC5B, showed induced and repressed expression, respectively. Interestingly, NR4A2 has been reported as a tumor suppressor in lymphoma. We show that ABC DLBCL females with a high NR4A2 expression showed better survival. Inversely, MUC5B expression causes a more malignant phenotype in several cancers. NR4A2 and MUC5B were confirmed to be estrogen-regulated when the ABC cell line U2932 was grafted to mice. The results demonstrate sex- and female reproductive age-dependent differences in gene expression between DLBCL subtypes, likely due to estrogens. This may contribute to the sex differences in incidence and prognosis.

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