Gene-expression profiles in hereditary breast cancer.

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Gene-expression profiles in hereditary breast cancer. / Hedenfalk, I; Duggan, D; Chen, Y; Radmacher, M; Bittner, M; Simon, Ronald; Meltzer, P; Gusterson, B; Esteller, M; Kallioniemi, O P; Wilfond, B; Borg, A; Trent, J; Raffeld, M; Yakhini, Z; Ben-Dor, A; Dougherty, E; Kononen, J; Bubendorf, L; Fehrle, W; Pittaluga, S; Gruvberger, S; Loman, N; Johannsson, O; Olsson, H; Sauter, G.

In: NEW ENGL J MED, Vol. 344, No. 8, 8, 2001, p. 539-548.

Research output: SCORING: Contribution to journalSCORING: Journal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Hedenfalk, I, Duggan, D, Chen, Y, Radmacher, M, Bittner, M, Simon, R, Meltzer, P, Gusterson, B, Esteller, M, Kallioniemi, OP, Wilfond, B, Borg, A, Trent, J, Raffeld, M, Yakhini, Z, Ben-Dor, A, Dougherty, E, Kononen, J, Bubendorf, L, Fehrle, W, Pittaluga, S, Gruvberger, S, Loman, N, Johannsson, O, Olsson, H & Sauter, G 2001, 'Gene-expression profiles in hereditary breast cancer.', NEW ENGL J MED, vol. 344, no. 8, 8, pp. 539-548. <http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/11207349?dopt=Citation>

APA

Hedenfalk, I., Duggan, D., Chen, Y., Radmacher, M., Bittner, M., Simon, R., Meltzer, P., Gusterson, B., Esteller, M., Kallioniemi, O. P., Wilfond, B., Borg, A., Trent, J., Raffeld, M., Yakhini, Z., Ben-Dor, A., Dougherty, E., Kononen, J., Bubendorf, L., ... Sauter, G. (2001). Gene-expression profiles in hereditary breast cancer. NEW ENGL J MED, 344(8), 539-548. [8]. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/11207349?dopt=Citation

Vancouver

Hedenfalk I, Duggan D, Chen Y, Radmacher M, Bittner M, Simon R et al. Gene-expression profiles in hereditary breast cancer. NEW ENGL J MED. 2001;344(8):539-548. 8.

Bibtex

@article{af9233310a154f74a055f41f29eca6c8,
title = "Gene-expression profiles in hereditary breast cancer.",
abstract = "BACKGROUND: Many cases of hereditary breast cancer are due to mutations in either the BRCA1 or the BRCA2 gene. The histopathological changes in these cancers are often characteristic of the mutant gene. We hypothesized that the genes expressed by these two types of tumors are also distinctive, perhaps allowing us to identify cases of hereditary breast cancer on the basis of gene-expression profiles. METHODS: RNA from samples of primary tumor from seven carriers of the BRCA1 mutation, seven carriers of the BRCA2 mutation, and seven patients with sporadic cases of breast cancer was compared with a microarray of 6512 complementary DNA clones of 5361 genes. Statistical analyses were used to identify a set of genes that could distinguish the BRCA1 genotype from the BRCA2 genotype. RESULTS: Permutation analysis of multivariate classification functions established that the gene-expression profiles of tumors with BRCA1 mutations, tumors with BRCA2 mutations, and sporadic tumors differed significantly from each other. An analysis of variance between the levels of gene expression and the genotype of the samples identified 176 genes that were differentially expressed in tumors with BRCA1 mutations and tumors with BRCA2 mutations. Given the known properties of some of the genes in this panel, our findings indicate that there are functional differences between breast tumors with BRCA1 mutations and those with BRCA2 mutations. CONCLUSIONS: Significantly different groups of genes are expressed by breast cancers with BRCA1 mutations and breast cancers with BRCA2 mutations. Our results suggest that a heritable mutation influences the gene-expression profile of the cancer.",
author = "I Hedenfalk and D Duggan and Y Chen and M Radmacher and M Bittner and Ronald Simon and P Meltzer and B Gusterson and M Esteller and Kallioniemi, {O P} and B Wilfond and A Borg and J Trent and M Raffeld and Z Yakhini and A Ben-Dor and E Dougherty and J Kononen and L Bubendorf and W Fehrle and S Pittaluga and S Gruvberger and N Loman and O Johannsson and H Olsson and G Sauter",
year = "2001",
language = "Deutsch",
volume = "344",
pages = "539--548",
journal = "NEW ENGL J MED",
issn = "0028-4793",
publisher = "Massachussetts Medical Society",
number = "8",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Gene-expression profiles in hereditary breast cancer.

AU - Hedenfalk, I

AU - Duggan, D

AU - Chen, Y

AU - Radmacher, M

AU - Bittner, M

AU - Simon, Ronald

AU - Meltzer, P

AU - Gusterson, B

AU - Esteller, M

AU - Kallioniemi, O P

AU - Wilfond, B

AU - Borg, A

AU - Trent, J

AU - Raffeld, M

AU - Yakhini, Z

AU - Ben-Dor, A

AU - Dougherty, E

AU - Kononen, J

AU - Bubendorf, L

AU - Fehrle, W

AU - Pittaluga, S

AU - Gruvberger, S

AU - Loman, N

AU - Johannsson, O

AU - Olsson, H

AU - Sauter, G

PY - 2001

Y1 - 2001

N2 - BACKGROUND: Many cases of hereditary breast cancer are due to mutations in either the BRCA1 or the BRCA2 gene. The histopathological changes in these cancers are often characteristic of the mutant gene. We hypothesized that the genes expressed by these two types of tumors are also distinctive, perhaps allowing us to identify cases of hereditary breast cancer on the basis of gene-expression profiles. METHODS: RNA from samples of primary tumor from seven carriers of the BRCA1 mutation, seven carriers of the BRCA2 mutation, and seven patients with sporadic cases of breast cancer was compared with a microarray of 6512 complementary DNA clones of 5361 genes. Statistical analyses were used to identify a set of genes that could distinguish the BRCA1 genotype from the BRCA2 genotype. RESULTS: Permutation analysis of multivariate classification functions established that the gene-expression profiles of tumors with BRCA1 mutations, tumors with BRCA2 mutations, and sporadic tumors differed significantly from each other. An analysis of variance between the levels of gene expression and the genotype of the samples identified 176 genes that were differentially expressed in tumors with BRCA1 mutations and tumors with BRCA2 mutations. Given the known properties of some of the genes in this panel, our findings indicate that there are functional differences between breast tumors with BRCA1 mutations and those with BRCA2 mutations. CONCLUSIONS: Significantly different groups of genes are expressed by breast cancers with BRCA1 mutations and breast cancers with BRCA2 mutations. Our results suggest that a heritable mutation influences the gene-expression profile of the cancer.

AB - BACKGROUND: Many cases of hereditary breast cancer are due to mutations in either the BRCA1 or the BRCA2 gene. The histopathological changes in these cancers are often characteristic of the mutant gene. We hypothesized that the genes expressed by these two types of tumors are also distinctive, perhaps allowing us to identify cases of hereditary breast cancer on the basis of gene-expression profiles. METHODS: RNA from samples of primary tumor from seven carriers of the BRCA1 mutation, seven carriers of the BRCA2 mutation, and seven patients with sporadic cases of breast cancer was compared with a microarray of 6512 complementary DNA clones of 5361 genes. Statistical analyses were used to identify a set of genes that could distinguish the BRCA1 genotype from the BRCA2 genotype. RESULTS: Permutation analysis of multivariate classification functions established that the gene-expression profiles of tumors with BRCA1 mutations, tumors with BRCA2 mutations, and sporadic tumors differed significantly from each other. An analysis of variance between the levels of gene expression and the genotype of the samples identified 176 genes that were differentially expressed in tumors with BRCA1 mutations and tumors with BRCA2 mutations. Given the known properties of some of the genes in this panel, our findings indicate that there are functional differences between breast tumors with BRCA1 mutations and those with BRCA2 mutations. CONCLUSIONS: Significantly different groups of genes are expressed by breast cancers with BRCA1 mutations and breast cancers with BRCA2 mutations. Our results suggest that a heritable mutation influences the gene-expression profile of the cancer.

M3 - SCORING: Zeitschriftenaufsatz

VL - 344

SP - 539

EP - 548

JO - NEW ENGL J MED

JF - NEW ENGL J MED

SN - 0028-4793

IS - 8

M1 - 8

ER -