Genetic analysis of the early natural history of epithelial ovarian carcinoma Journal Article


Authors: Pothuri, B.; Leitao, M. M.; Levine, D. A.; Viale, A.; Olshen, A. B.; Arroyo, C.; Bogomolniy, F.; Olvera, N.; Lin, O.; Soslow, R. A.; Robson, M. E.; Offit, K.; Barakat, R. R.; Boyd, J.
Article Title: Genetic analysis of the early natural history of epithelial ovarian carcinoma
Abstract: Background: The high mortality rate associated with epithelial ovarian carcinoma (EOC) reflects diagnosis commonly at an advanced stage, but improved early detection is hindered by uncertainty as to the histologic origin and early natural history of this malignancy. Methodology/Principal Findings: Here we report combined molecular genetic and morphologic analyses of normal human ovarian tissues and early stage cancers, from both BRCA mutation carriers and the general population, indicating that EOCs frequently arise from dysplastic precursor lesions within epithelial inclusion cysts. In pathologically normal ovaries, molecular evidence of oncogenic stress was observed specifically within epithelial inclusion cysts. To further explore potential very early events in ovarian tumorigenesis, ovarian tissues from women not known to be at high risk for ovarian cancer were subjected to laser catapult microdissection and gene expression profiling. These studies revealed a quasineoplastic expression signature in benign ovarian cystic inclusion epithelium compared to surface epithelium, specifically with respect to genes affecting signal transduction, cell cycle control, and mitotic spindle formation. Consistent with this gene expression profile, a significantly higher cell proliferation index (increased cell proliferation and decreased apoptosis) was observed in histopathologically normal ovarian cystic compared to surface epithelium. Furthermore, aneuploidy was frequently identified in normal ovarian cystic epithelium but not in surface epithelium. Conclusions/Significance: Together, these data indicate that EOC frequently arises in ovarian cystic inclusions, is preceded by an identifiable dysplastic precursor lesion, and that increased cell proliferation, decreased apoptosis, and aneuploidy are likely to represent very early aberrations in ovarian tumorigenesis. © 2010 Pothuri et al.
Keywords: signal transduction; controlled study; human tissue; gene mutation; disease course; histopathology; cancer staging; molecular genetics; cancer diagnosis; genetic analysis; cell proliferation; cell structure; apoptosis; gene expression profiling; brca1 protein; heterozygote; cancer mortality; carcinogenesis; early diagnosis; ovary carcinoma; mitosis spindle; molecular biology; cell cycle regulation; aneuploidy; dysplasia; microdissection; ovary cyst; epidermoid cyst
Journal Title: PLoS ONE
Volume: 5
Issue: 4
ISSN: 1932-6203
Publisher: Public Library of Science  
Date Published: 2010-04-26
Start Page: e10358
Language: English
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0010358
PROVIDER: scopus
PMCID: PMC2859950
PUBMED: 20436685
DOI/URL:
Notes: --- - "Cited By (since 1996): 5" - "Export Date: 20 April 2011" - "Art. No.: e10358" - "Source: Scopus"
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MSK Authors
  1. Kenneth Offit
    788 Offit
  2. Richard R Barakat
    629 Barakat
  3. Mark E Robson
    676 Robson
  4. Douglas A Levine
    380 Levine
  5. Bhavana Pothuri
    14 Pothuri
  6. Mario Leitao
    575 Leitao
  7. Jeffrey Boyd
    112 Boyd
  8. Oscar Lin
    307 Lin
  9. Adam B Olshen
    107 Olshen
  10. Robert Soslow
    793 Soslow
  11. Agnes Viale
    245 Viale
  12. Crispinita D Arroyo
    30 Arroyo
  13. Narciso Olvera
    73 Olvera