Journal article

The Biological and Clinical Significance of Glutaminase in Luminal Breast Cancer


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Author list: Brendah K. Masisi 1ORCID,Rokaya El Ansari 1,Lutfi Alfarsi 1,Madeleine L. Craze 1,Natasha Jewa 1,Andrew Oldfield 1,Hayley Cheung 1,Michael Toss 1,Emad A. Rakha 1,2 andAndrew R. Green 1,*

Publication year: 2021

Journal: Cancers

Volume number: 13

Issue number: 16

ISSN: 2072-6694



The glutamine metabolism has a key role in the regulation of uncontrolled tumour growth. This study aimed to evaluate the expression and prognostic significance of glutaminase in luminal breast cancer (BC). The glutaminase isoforms (GLS/GLS2) were assessed at genomic/transcriptomic levels, using METABRIC (n = 1398) and GeneMiner datasets (n = 4712), and protein using immunohistochemistry in well-characterised cohorts of Oestrogen receptor-positive/HER2-negative BC patients: ductal carcinoma in situ (DCIS; n = 206) and invasive breast cancer (IBC; n = 717). Glutaminase expression was associated with clinicopathological features, patient outcome and glutamine-metabolism-related genes. In DCIS, GLS alone and GLS+/GLS2- expression were risk factors for shorter local recurrence-free interval (p < 0.0001 and p = 0.001, respectively) and remained prognostic factors independent of tumour size, grade and comedo necrosis (p = 0.0008 and p = 0.003, respectively). In IBC, GLS gene copy number gain with high mRNA expression was associated with poor patient outcome (p = 0.011), whereas high GLS2 protein was predictive of a longer disease-free survival (p = 0.006). Glutaminase plays a role in the biological function of luminal BC, particularly GLS in the early non-invasive stage, which could be used as a potential biomarker to predict disease progression and a target for inhibition. Further validation is required to confirm these observations, and functional assessments are needed to explore their specific roles.

Keywords:

glutaminase; DCIS; IBC; prognosis


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Last updated on 2024-19-10 at 12:03