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1.
Biology (Basel) ; 13(9)2024 Aug 23.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39336082

ABSTRACT

Background: Previous research has shown that the Serum Amyloid A (SAA) protein family is intricately involved in inflammatory signaling and various disease pathologies. We have previously demonstrated that SAA is associated with increased colitis disease severity and the promotion of tumorigenesis. However, the specific role of SAA proteins in breast cancer pathology remains unclear. Therefore, we investigated the role of systemic SAA1 and SAA2 (SAA1/2) in a triple-negative breast cancer mouse model. Methods: Syngeneic breast tumors were established in wild-type mice, and mice lacking the SAA1/2 (SAADKO). Subsequently, tumor volume was monitored, species survival determined, the inflammatory profiles of mice assessed with a multiplex assay, and tumor molecular biology and histology characterized with Western blotting and H&E histological staining. Results: WT tumor-bearing mice had increased levels of plasma SAA compared to wild-type control mice, while SAADKO control and tumor-bearing mice presented with lower levels of SAA in their plasma. SAADKO tumor-bearing mice also displayed significantly lower concentrations of systemic inflammatory markers. Tumors from SAADKO mice overall had lower levels of SAA compared to tumors from wild-type mice, decreased apoptosis and inflammasome signaling, and little to no tumor necrosis. Conclusions: We demonstrated that systemic SAA1/2 stimulates the activation of the NLRP3 inflammasome in breast tumors, leading to the production of pro-inflammatory cytokines. This, in turn, promoted apoptosis and tumor necrosis but did not significantly impact tumor growth or histological grading.

2.
Front Genet ; 10: 641, 2019.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31354789

ABSTRACT

Despite advances in pharmacogenetics, the majority of heritability for treatment response cannot be explained by common variation, suggesting that factors such as epigenetics may play a key role. Regulatory genes, such as those involved in DNA methylation and transcriptional repression, are therefore excellent candidates for investigating antipsychotic treatment response. This study explored the differential expression of regulatory genes between patients with schizophrenia (chronic and antipsychotic-naïve first-episode patients) and healthy controls in order to identify candidate genes for association with antipsychotic treatment response. Seven candidate differentially expressed genes were identified, and four variants within these genes were found to be significantly associated with treatment response (DNMT3A rs2304429, HDAC5 rs11079983, and HDAC9 rs1178119 and rs11764843). Further analyses revealed that two of these variants (rs2304429 and rs11079983) are predicted to alter the expression of specific genes (DNMT3A, ASB16, and ASB16-AS1) in brain regions previously implicated in schizophrenia and treatment response. These results may aid in the development of biomarkers for antipsychotic treatment response, as well as novel drug targets.

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