BRCA1 expression is reduced or undetectable in the majority of high-grade, ductal breast cancers. It has long been noted that loss of BRCA1 activity, either by germ-line mutations or by down-regulation of gene expression, leads to tumor formation in specific target tissues. In particular, decreased BRCA1 expression contributes to both sporadic and inherited breast tumor progression. Reduced expression of BRCA1 is tumorigenic because it plays an important role in the repair of DNA damages, especially double-strand breaks, by the potentially error-free pathway of homologous recombination. Since cells that lack the BRCA1 protein tend to repair DNA damages by alternative more error-prone mechanisms, the reduction or silencing of this protein generates mutations and gross chromosomal rearrangements that can lead to progression to breast cancer. In
serous ovarian carcinomas, a sub-category constituting about 2/3 of EOCs, low BRCA1 expression occurs in more than 50% of cases. Bowtell reviewed the literature indicating that deficient homologous recombination repair caused by BRCA1 deficiency is tumorigenic. In particular, this deficiency initiates a cascade of molecular events that sculpt the evolution of high-grade serous ovarian cancer and dictate its response to therapy. Especially noted was that BRCA1 deficiency could be the cause of tumorigenesis, whether due to BRCA1 mutation or any other event that causes a deficiency of BRCA1 expression. In addition to its role in repairing DNA damages, BRCA1 facilitates
apoptosis in breast and ovarian cell lines when cells are stressed by agents, including
ionizing radiation, that cause
DNA damages.
Repair of DNA damages and
apoptosis are two enzymatic processes essential for maintaining
genome integrity in humans. Cells that are deficient in DNA repair tend to accumulate
DNA damages, and when such cells are also defective in apoptosis, they tend to survive even with excess DNA damage. Replication of DNA in such cells leads to
mutations and these mutations may cause cancer. Thus, BRCA1 appears to have two roles related to the prevention of cancer, where one role is to promote repair of a specific class of damages and the second role is to induce apoptosis if the level of such DNA damage is beyond the cell's repair capability Similarly,
BRCA1 mutations are only seen in about 18% of ovarian cancers (13%
germline mutations and 5%
somatic mutations). Thus, while BRCA1 expression is low in the majority of these cancers,
BRCA1 mutation is not a major cause of reduced expression. Certain latent viruses, which are frequently detected in breast cancer tumors, can decrease the expression of the BRCA1 gene and cause the development of breast tumors.
BRCA1 promoter hypermethylation in breast and ovarian cancer BRCA1 promoter hypermethylation was present in only 13% of unselected primary breast carcinomas. Similarly,
BRCA1 promoter hypermethylation was present in only 5% to 15% of EOC cases. Breast cancers can be
classified based on receptor status or histology, with
triple-negative breast cancer (15%–25% of breast cancers),
HER2+ (15%–30% of breast cancers),
ER+/
PR+ (about 70% of breast cancers), and
Invasive lobular carcinoma (about 5%–10% of invasive breast cancer). All four types of breast cancer were found to have an average of about 100-fold increase in miR-182, compared to normal breast tissue. In breast cancer cell lines, there is an inverse correlation of BRCA1 protein levels with miR-182 expression. Thus, miR-146a and/or miR-146b-5p may also contribute to reduced expression of BRCA1 in these triple-negative breast cancers.
MicroRNA repression of BRCA1 in ovarian cancers In both
serous tubal intraepithelial carcinoma (the precursor lesion to
high grade serous ovarian carcinoma (HG-SOC)), and in HG-SOC itself, miR-182 is overexpressed in about 70% of cases. In cells with over-expressed miR-182, BRCA1 remained low, even after exposure to ionizing radiation (which normally raises BRCA1 expression). and deficiencies in DNA repair appear to underlie many forms of cancer. If DNA repair is deficient, DNA damage tends to accumulate. Such excess DNA damage may increase
mutational errors during
DNA replication due to error-prone
translesion synthesis. Excess DNA damage may also increase
epigenetic alterations due to errors during DNA repair. Such mutations and epigenetic alterations may give rise to
cancer. The frequent microRNA-induced deficiency of
BRCA1 in breast and ovarian cancers likely contributes to the progression of those cancers. ==Germ-line mutations and founder effect ==