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Revista de investigación clínica

versión On-line ISSN 2564-8896versión impresa ISSN 0034-8376

Resumen

ADAMS-REYES, Nishi et al. Whole Sequencing of the Mitochondrial Genome of Breast Cancer Tissue in Mexican-Mestizo Postmenopausal Women with Different Body Mass Index. Rev. invest. clín. [online]. 2019, vol.71, n.4, pp.237-245.  Epub 12-Abr-2021. ISSN 2564-8896.  https://doi.org/10.24875/ric.19002909.

Background

Mitochondrial and oxidative stress has been related to obesity and breast cancer being this cancer more frequent and more aggressive in postmenopausal women with obesity.

Objective

The objective of this study was to investigate whether Mexican-Mestizo postmenopausal women with breast cancer and obesity present different somatic mutations in the mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) when compared to women with normal body mass index (BMI).

Subjects and Methods

We included six Mexican-Mestizo postmenopausal women bearing breast cancer and who underwent mastectomy or breast-conserving surgery. BMI was determined in each case. Patients’ genomic DNA was isolated from blood leukocytes and tumor tissue samples. Whole mtDNA sequence was determined by MitoChip v2.0 mitochondrial resequencing array, and data were analyzed using the GeneChip Sequence Analysis Software. Tumor mtDNA sequence was compared with matched leukocyte mtDNA sequence.

Results

Three women had a normal BMI and three presented obesity. Overall, we found 64 genetic variants: 53.1% were somatic mutations and 46.9% were polymorphisms; 44.1% were in the non-coding region and 55.9% were in genes that encode for mitochondrial proteins. Among the somatic mutations, 67.7% were in patients with normal BMI and 32.3% in patients with obesity.

Conclusions

We did not find a higher frequency of mitochondrial somatic mutations in postmenopausal women with breast cancer and obesity compared to those with normal BMI. However, results could be due to the small number of women studied.

Palabras llave : Breast cancer; Body mass index; Mexican-Mestizo postmenopausal women; Mitochondria genome; Somatic mutations.

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