Obesity and menopause modify the epigenomic profile of breast cancer.
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Date
2017-04-25
Authors
Crujeiras, Ana B
Diaz-Lagares, Angel
Stefansson, Olafur A
Macias-Gonzalez, Manuel
Sandoval, Juan
Cueva, Juan
Lopez-Lopez, Rafael
Moran, Sebastian
Jonasson, Jon G
Tryggvadottir, Laufey
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Abstract
Obesity is a high risk factor for breast cancer. This relationship could be marked by a specific methylome. The current work was aimed to explore the impact of obesity and menopausal status on variation in breast cancer methylomes. Data from Infinium 450K array-based methylomes of 64 breast tumors were coupled with information on BMI and menopausal status. Additionally, DNA methylation results were validated in 18 non-tumor and 81 tumor breast samples. Breast tumors arising in either pre- or postmenopausal women stratified by BMI or menopausal status alone were not associated with a specific DNA methylation pattern. Intriguingly, the DNA methylation pattern identified in association with the high-risk group (postmenopausal women with high BMI (>25) and premenopausal women with normal or low BMI 25) and premenopausal women with normal or low BMI
Description
MeSH Terms
Breast Neoplasms
Cohort Studies
DNA Methylation
Epigenomics
Female
Humans
Menopause
Middle Aged
Obesity
Cohort Studies
DNA Methylation
Epigenomics
Female
Humans
Menopause
Middle Aged
Obesity
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Keywords
450k methylation array, DNA methylation, breast cancer, epigenomics, obesity