Cells (Apr 2020)

AR/ER Ratio Correlates with Expression of Proliferation Markers and with Distinct Subset of Breast Tumors

  • Nelson Rangel,
  • Milena Rondon-Lagos,
  • Laura Annaratone,
  • Andrés Felipe Aristizábal-Pachon,
  • Paola Cassoni,
  • Anna Sapino,
  • Isabella Castellano

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/cells9041064
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9, no. 4
p. 1064

Abstract

Read online

The co-expression of androgen (AR) and estrogen (ER) receptors, in terms of higher AR/ER ratio, has been recently associated with poor outcome in ER-positive (ER+) breast cancer (BC) patients. The aim of this study was to analyze if the biological aggressiveness, underlined in ER+ BC tumors with higher AR/ER ratio, could be due to higher expression of genes related to cell proliferation. On a cohort of 47 ER+ BC patients, the AR/ER ratio was assessed by immunohistochemistry and by mRNA analysis. The expression level of five gene proliferation markers was defined through TaqMan®-qPCR assays. Results were validated using 979 BC cases obtained from gene expression public databases. ER+ BC tumors with ratios of AR/ER ≥ 2 have higher expression levels of cellular proliferation genes than tumors with ratios of AR/ER P P = 0.005). Moreover, BC cases with ratios of AR/ER ≥ 2 of the validation cohort were mainly assigned to luminal B and HER2-enriched molecular subtypes, typically characterized by higher proliferation and poorer prognosis. These data suggest that joint routine evaluation of AR and ER expression may identify a unique subset of tumors, which show higher levels of cellular proliferation and therefore a more aggressive behavior.

Keywords