Breast Cancer and the Environment: Which Genes Are Important?

Authors

  • Travis Salisbury WVAS

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.55632/pwvas.v88i1.22

Abstract

Environmental factors, such as exposures to pollutants, are believed to play a role in many cases of breast cancer; however it is not clear how this mediated. Dioxins are among the most stable and widespread pollutants in the environment, and they are produced as by-products of industry and municipal waste incineration. Dioxins have been implicated in breast cancer, but mechanisms by which this occurs in unclear. We hypothesize that dioxins link to breast cancer is mediated through changes in gene expression, and our primary objective is to identify dioxin-regulated cancer genes using genomics. RNA-Sequencing analysis revealed that dioxin regulated the expression of over 600 genes in MCF-7 breast cancer cells (BCCs).
Bioinformatics Pathway Analysis revealed that dioxin regulated genes (DRGs) were most highly associated with the cancer and cancer-associated pathways including cell growth and proliferation and molecular transport. Further analysis identified LAT1, an amino acid transporter that is overexpressed in breast cancer, as a primary gene target of dioxin. Short interfering RNA (siRNA)-directed knockdown of the dioxin receptor, AHR, confirmed dioxin-stimulated increases in LAT1 expression required AHR. Upregulation of LAT1 by TCDD coincided with increases in leucine uptake by MCF-7 cells. In MCF-7 and MDA-MB-231 breast cancer cells, LAT1 expression was reduced in response to knockdown of AHR expression.
Gene knockdown experiments demonstrated that proliferation of MCF-7 and MDA-MB-231 BCCs is dependent on both LAT1 and AHR. Collectively, these findings confirm the dependence of cancer cells on leucine uptake and establish a mechanism for regulation of LAT1 by dioxin.

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Published

2016-07-26

How to Cite

Salisbury, T. (2016). Breast Cancer and the Environment: Which Genes Are Important?. Proceedings of the West Virginia Academy of Science, 88(1). https://doi.org/10.55632/pwvas.v88i1.22

Issue

Section

Meeting Abstracts-Oral