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Protein expression of the gp78 E3 ligase predicts poor breast cancer outcome based on race
Sandeep K. Singhal, … , Allan M. Weissman, Kevin Gardner
Sandeep K. Singhal, … , Allan M. Weissman, Kevin Gardner
Published May 31, 2022
Citation Information: JCI Insight. 2022;7(13):e157465. https://doi.org/10.1172/jci.insight.157465.
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Research Article Cell biology Oncology

Protein expression of the gp78 E3 ligase predicts poor breast cancer outcome based on race

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Abstract

Women of African ancestry suffer higher rates of breast cancer mortality compared with all other groups in the United States. Though the precise reasons for these disparities remain unclear, many recent studies have implicated a role for differences in tumor biology. Using an epitope-validated antibody against the endoplasmic reticulum–associated E3 ligase, gp78, we show that elevated levels of gp78 in patient breast cancer cells predict poor survival. Moreover, high levels of gp78 are associated with poor outcomes in both ER+ and ER– tumors, and breast cancers expressing elevated amounts of gp78 protein are enriched in gene expression pathways that influence cell cycle, metabolism, receptor-mediated signaling, and cell stress response pathways. In multivariate analysis adjusted for subtype and grade, gp78 protein is an independent predictor of poor outcomes in women of African ancestry. Furthermore, gene expression signatures, derived from patients stratified by gp78 protein expression, are strong predictors of recurrence and pathological complete response in retrospective clinical trial data and share many common features with gene sets previously identified to be overrepresented in breast cancers based on race. These findings implicate a prominent role for gp78 in tumor progression and offer insights into our understanding of racial differences in breast cancer outcomes.

Authors

Sandeep K. Singhal, Jung S. Byun, Tingfen Yan, Ryan Yancey, Ambar Caban, Sara Gil Hernandez, Sediqua Bufford, Stephen M. Hewitt, Joy Winfield, Jaya Pradhan, Vesco Mustkov, Jasmine A. McDonald, Eliseo J. Pérez-Stable, Anna María Nápoles, Nasreen Vohra, Adriana De Siervi, Clayton Yates, Melissa B. Davis, Mei Yang, Yien Che Tsai, Allan M. Weissman, Kevin Gardner

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Figure 1

Gp78 protein is expressed at higher levels in the breast cancers of women of African ancestry and differentially predicts survival base on race.

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Gp78 protein is expressed at higher levels in the breast cancers of wome...
(A) Quantitative IHC staining of tissue microarray cores of normal versus different breast cancers. Differences in staining intensity are indicated by H-score (see text). Scale bar: 200 μm (top); 33 μm (bottom). (B) Left, violin plot quantitative comparison of protein expression of gp78 in the breast cancer of African American compared with European American patients. Right, violin plot comparison of relative expression of gp78 protein in different breast cancer subtypes. (C) Top, histogram of maximally ranked statistics analysis (6, 11) to determine optimal gp78 cutpoint. Bottom, Kaplan-Meier plot survival analysis showing the relationship between high versus low gp78 expression and survival. Middle row shows H-score versus log rank statistic. (D) Forest plot analysis indicating the hazard ratio, P value, and 95% CI for different gp78 protein cutoffs in the total cohort or the cohort separated by race using optimized or median cutoffs as indicated. Optcut(AA):(AA) represents the optimal cutoff generated only using the AA population and then applied to AA samples for survival analysis. Optcut(AA):(EA) represents the AA optimal cutoff applied to only EA samples for survival analysis. Optcut(ALL) is when the cutoff is determined from the total cohort. Red lines indicate values the showed significant survival difference.

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