TY - UNPB
T1 - Subtype-specific circadian clock dysregulation modulates breast cancer biology, invasiveness, and prognosis
AU - Hammarlund, Jan A
AU - Li, Shi-Yang
AU - Wu, Gang
AU - Lian, Jia-Wen
AU - Howell, Sacha J
AU - Clarke, Rob
AU - Adamson, Antony
AU - Gonçalves, Cátia F
AU - Hogenesch, John B
AU - Meng, Qing-Jun
AU - Anafi, Ron C
PY - 2023/5/19
Y1 - 2023/5/19
N2 - Studies in shift workers and model organisms link circadian disruption to breast cancer. However, molecular rhythms in non-cancerous and cancerous human breast tissues are largely unknown. We reconstructed rhythms informatically, integrating locally collected, time-stamped biopsies with public datasets. For non-cancerous tissue, the inferred order of core-circadian genes matches established physiology. Inflammatory, epithelial-mesenchymal transition (EMT), and estrogen responsiveness pathways show circadian modulation. Among tumors, clock correlation analysis demonstrates subtype-specific changes in circadian organization. Luminal A organoids and informatic ordering of Luminal A samples exhibit continued, albeit disrupted rhythms. However, CYCLOPS magnitude, a measure of global rhythm strength, varied widely among Luminal A samples. Cycling of EMT pathway genes was markedly increased in high-magnitude Luminal A tumors. Patients with high-magnitude tumors had reduced 5-year survival. Correspondingly, 3D Luminal A cultures show reduced invasion following molecular clock disruption. This study links subtype-specific circadian disruption in breast cancer to EMT, metastatic potential, and prognosis.
AB - Studies in shift workers and model organisms link circadian disruption to breast cancer. However, molecular rhythms in non-cancerous and cancerous human breast tissues are largely unknown. We reconstructed rhythms informatically, integrating locally collected, time-stamped biopsies with public datasets. For non-cancerous tissue, the inferred order of core-circadian genes matches established physiology. Inflammatory, epithelial-mesenchymal transition (EMT), and estrogen responsiveness pathways show circadian modulation. Among tumors, clock correlation analysis demonstrates subtype-specific changes in circadian organization. Luminal A organoids and informatic ordering of Luminal A samples exhibit continued, albeit disrupted rhythms. However, CYCLOPS magnitude, a measure of global rhythm strength, varied widely among Luminal A samples. Cycling of EMT pathway genes was markedly increased in high-magnitude Luminal A tumors. Patients with high-magnitude tumors had reduced 5-year survival. Correspondingly, 3D Luminal A cultures show reduced invasion following molecular clock disruption. This study links subtype-specific circadian disruption in breast cancer to EMT, metastatic potential, and prognosis.
U2 - 10.1101/2023.05.17.540386
DO - 10.1101/2023.05.17.540386
M3 - Preprint
C2 - 37293090
T3 - bioRxiv
BT - Subtype-specific circadian clock dysregulation modulates breast cancer biology, invasiveness, and prognosis
PB - Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press
ER -