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Series GSE15361 Query DataSets for GSE15361
Status Public on Jul 10, 2009
Title Molecular profiling of breast cancer cell lines defines relevant tumor models (gene expression)
Organism Homo sapiens
Experiment type Expression profiling by array
Summary Summary: Breast cancer cell lines have been used widely to investigate breast cancer pathobiology and new therapies. Breast cancer is a molecularly heterogeneous disease, and it is important to understand how well and which cell lines best model that diversity. In particular, microarray studies have identified molecular subtypes (luminal A, luminal B, ERBB2-associated, basal-like and normal-like) with characteristic gene-expression patterns and underlying DNA copy number alterations (CNAs). Here, we studied a collection of breast cancer cell lines to catalog molecular profiles and to assess their relation to breast cancer subtypes. Whole-genome DNA microarrays were used to profile gene expression and CNAs in a collection of 52 widely-used breast cancer cell lines, and comparisons were made to existing profiles of primary breast tumors. Hierarchical clustering was used to identify gene-expression subtypes, and Gene Set Enrichment Analysis (GSEA) to discover biological features of those subtypes. Genomic and transcriptional profiles were integrated to discover within high-amplitude CNAs candidate cancer genes with coordinately altered gene copy number and expression. Transcriptional profiling of breast cancer cell lines identified one luminal and two basal-like (A and B) subtypes. Luminal lines displayed an estrogen receptor (ER) signature and resembled luminal-A/B tumors, basal-A lines were associated with ETS-pathway and BRCA1 signatures and resembled basal-like tumors, and basal-B lines displayed mesenchymal and stem-cell characteristics. Compared to tumors, cell lines exhibited similar patterns of CNA, but an overall higher complexity of CNA (genetically simple luminal-A tumors were not represented), and only partial conservation of subtype-specific CNAs. We identified 80 high-level DNA amplifications and 13 presumptive homozygous deletions, and the resident genes with concomitantly altered gene-expression, highlighting known and novel candidate breast cancer genes. Overall, breast cancer cell lines were genetically more complex than tumors, but retained expression patterns with relevance to the luminal-basal subtype distinction. The compendium of molecular profiles defines cell lines suitable for investigations of subtype-specific pathobiology, biomarkers and therapies, and provides a resource for discovery of new breast cancer genes.
 
Overall design HEEBO oligonucleotide microarrays from the Stanford Functional Genomics Facility were used to perform gene expression profiling of 50 human breast epithelial cell lines, in comparison to a universal RNA reference. Expression data were analyzed by hierarchical clustering to identify subgroups, and gene set enrichment analysis to identify subgroup-specific gene pathways.
 
Contributor(s) Kao J, Choi Y, Bocanegra M
Citation(s) 19582160
Submission date Mar 23, 2009
Last update date Mar 21, 2012
Contact name Jonathan Pollack
E-mail(s) pollack1@stanford.edu
Phone 650-736-1987
Organization name Stanford University
Department Pathology
Lab Pollack Lab
Street address 269 Campus Drive, CCSR3245A
City Stanford
State/province CA
ZIP/Postal code 94305-5176
Country USA
 
Platforms (1)
GPL7785 SMD Print_1354
Samples (50)
GSM350554 hop075|BT474
GSM350555 hop090|MDA231
GSM350556 hop083|BT20
This SubSeries is part of SuperSeries:
GSE15376 Molecular profiling of breast cancer cell lines defines relevant tumor models
Relations
BioProject PRJNA123251

Download family Format
SOFT formatted family file(s) SOFTHelp
MINiML formatted family file(s) MINiMLHelp
Series Matrix File(s) TXTHelp

Supplementary file Size Download File type/resource
GSE15361_RAW.tar 4.6 Mb (http)(custom) TAR
Processed data included within Sample table

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