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Mitochondrial Control Region Variants Related to Breast Cancer.

Jorge Hermilo Vega AvalosLuis Enrique HernándezLaura Yareni ZúñigaMaría Guadalupe Sánchez-ParadaAna Elizabeth González-SantiagoRoman-Pintos Luis MiguelRolando Castañeda ArellanoLuis Daniel Hernández-OrtegaArieh Roldán Mercado-SesmaFelipe de Jesús Orozco-LunaRaúl Cuauhtémoc Baptista-Rosas
Published in: Genes (2022)
Breast cancer has an important incidence in the worldwide female population. Although alterations in the mitochondrial genome probably play an important role in carcinogenesis, the actual evidence is ambiguous and inconclusive. Our purpose was to explore differences in mitochondrial sequences of cases with breast cancer compared with control samples from different origins. We identified 124 mtDNA sequences associated with breast cancer cases, of which 86 were complete and 38 were partial sequences. Of these 86 complete sequences, 52 belonged to patients with a confirmed diagnosis of breast cancer, and 34 sequences were obtained from healthy mammary tissue of the same patients used as controls. From the mtDNA analysis, two polymorphisms with significant statistical differences were found: m.310del (rs869289246) in 34.6% (27/78) of breast cancer cases and 61.7% (21/34) in the controls; and m.315dup (rs369786048) in 60.2% (47/78) of breast cancer cases and 38.2% (13/34) in the controls. In addition, the variant m.16519T>C (rs3937033) was found in 59% of the control sequences and 52% of the breast cancer sequences with a significant statistical difference. Polymorphic changes are evolutionarily related to the haplogroup H of Indo-European and Euro-Asiatic origins; however, they were found in all non-European breast cancers.
Keyphrases
  • oxidative stress
  • copy number
  • mitochondrial dna
  • end stage renal disease
  • gene expression
  • chronic kidney disease
  • newly diagnosed
  • patient reported outcomes
  • childhood cancer