Maria Diez-Rodriguez
Nottingham University Hospitals NHS Trust
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Publication
Featured researches published by Maria Diez-Rodriguez.
British Journal of Cancer | 2016
Andrew R. Green; Mohammed A. Aleskandarany; Devika Agarwal; Somaia Elsheikh; Christopher C. Nolan; Maria Diez-Rodriguez; R. Douglas Macmillan; Graham Ball; Carlos Caldas; Srinivasan Madhusudan; Ian O. Ellis; Emad A. Rakha
Background:MYC is amplified in approximately 15% of breast cancers (BCs) and is associated with poor outcome. c-MYC protein is multi-faceted and participates in many aspects of cellular function and is linked with therapeutic response in BCs. We hypothesised that the functional role of c-MYC differs between molecular subtypes of BCs.Methods:We therefore investigated the correlation between c-MYC protein expression and other proteins involved in different cellular functions together with clinicopathological parameters, patients’ outcome and treatments in a large early-stage molecularly characterised series of primary invasive BCs (n=1106) using immunuohistochemistry. The METABRIC BC cohort (n=1980) was evaluated for MYC mRNA expression and a systems biology approach utilised to identify genes associated with MYC in the different BC molecular subtypes.Results:High MYC and c-MYC expression was significantly associated with poor prognostic factors, including grade and basal-like BCs. In luminal A tumours, c-MYC was associated with ATM (P=0.005), Cyclin B1 (P=0.002), PIK3CA (P=0.009) and Ki67 (P<0.001). In contrast, in basal-like tumours, c-MYC showed positive association with Cyclin E (P=0.003) and p16 (P=0.042) expression only. c-MYC was an independent predictor of a shorter distant metastases-free survival in luminal A LN+ tumours treated with endocrine therapy (ET; P=0.013). In luminal tumours treated with ET, MYC mRNA expression was associated with BC-specific survival (P=0.001). In ER-positive tumours, MYC was associated with expression of translational genes while in ER-negative tumours it was associated with upregulation of glucose metabolism genes.Conclusions:c-MYC function is associated with specific molecular subtypes of BCs and its overexpression confers resistance to ET. The diverse mechanisms of c-MYC function in the different molecular classes of BCs warrants further investigation particularly as potential therapeutic targets.
Histopathology | 2017
Islam Miligy; Priya Mohan; Ahmed Gaber; Mohammed A. Aleskandarany; Christopher C. Nolan; Maria Diez-Rodriguez; Abhik Mukherjee; Caroline Chapman; Ian O. Ellis; Andrew R. Green; Emad A. Rakha
Tumour‐infiltrating lymphocytes (TILs) are an important component of the immune response to cancer and have a prognostic value in breast cancer. Although several studies have investigated the role of T lymphocytes in breast cancer, the role of B lymphocytes (TIL‐Bs) in ductal carcinoma in situ (DCIS) remains uncertain. This study aimed to assess the role of TIL‐Bs in DCIS.
British Journal of Cancer | 2018
Madeleine L. Craze; Hayley Cheung; Natasha Jewa; Nuno D M Coimbra; Daniele Soria; Rokaya El-Ansari; Mohammed A. Aleskandarany; Kiu Wai Cheng; Maria Diez-Rodriguez; Christopher C. Nolan; Ian O. Ellis; Emad A. Rakha; Andrew R. Green
Background:Altered cellular metabolism is a hallmark of cancer and some are reliant on glutamine for sustained proliferation and survival. We hypothesise that the glutamine–proline regulatory axis has a key role in breast cancer (BC) in the highly proliferative classes.Methods:Glutaminase (GLS), pyrroline-5-carboxylate synthetase (ALDH18A1), and pyrroline-5-carboxylate reductase 1 (PYCR1) were assessed at DNA/mRNA/protein levels in large, well-characterised cohorts.Results:Gain of PYCR1 copy number and high PYCR1 mRNA was associated with Luminal B tumours. High ALDH18A1 and high GLS protein expression was observed in the oestrogen receptor (ER)+/human epidermal growth factor receptor (HER2)– high proliferation class (Luminal B) compared with ER+/HER2– low proliferation class (Luminal A) (P=0.030 and P=0.022 respectively), however this was not observed with mRNA. Cluster analysis of the glutamine–proline regulatory axis genes revealed significant associations with molecular subtypes of BC and patient outcome independent of standard clinicopathological parameters (P=0.012). High protein expression of the glutamine–proline enzymes were all associated with high MYC protein in Luminal B tumours only (P<0.001).Conclusions:We provide comprehensive clinical data indicating that the glutamine–proline regulatory axis plays an important role in the aggressive subclass of luminal BC and is therefore a potential therapeutic target.
Breast Cancer Research | 2018
Rokaya El Ansari; Madeleine L. Craze; Islam Miligy; Maria Diez-Rodriguez; Christopher C. Nolan; Ian O. Ellis; Emad A. Rakha; Andrew R. Green
BackgroundBreast cancer (BC) is a heterogeneous disease characterised by variant biology and patient outcome. The amino acid transporter, SLC7A5, plays a role in BC although its impact on patient outcome in different BC subtypes remains to be validated. This study aimed to determine whether the clinicopathological and prognostic value of SLC7A5 is different within the molecular classes of BC.MethodsSLC7A5 was assessed at the genomic level, using Molecular Taxonomy of Breast Cancer International Consortium (METABRIC) data (n = 1980), and proteomic level, using immunohistochemical analysis and tissue microarray (TMA) (n = 2664; 1110 training and 1554 validation sets) in well-characterised primary BC cohorts. SLC7A5 expression correlated with clinicopathological and biological parameters, molecular subtypes and patient outcome.ResultsSLC7A5 mRNA and protein expression were strongly correlated with larger tumour size and higher grade. High expression was observed in triple negative (TN), human epidermal growth factor receptor 2 (HER2)+, and luminal B subtypes. SLC7A5 mRNA and protein expression was significantly associated with the expression of the key regulator of tumour cell metabolism, c-MYC, specifically in luminal B tumours only (p = 0.001). High expression of SLC7A5 mRNA and protein was associated with poor patient outcome (p < 0.001) but only in the highly proliferative oestrogen receptor (ER)+/ luminal B (p = 0.007) and HER2+ classes of BC (p = 0.03). In multivariate analysis, SLC7A5 protein was an independent risk factor for shorter breast-cancer-specific survival only in ER+ high-proliferation tumours (p = 0.02).ConclusionsSLC7A5 appears to play a role in the aggressive highly proliferative ER+ subtype driven by MYC and could act as a potential therapeutic target. Functional assessment is necessary to reveal the specific role played by this transporter in the ER+ highly proliferative subclass and HER2+ subclass of BC.
British Journal of Cancer | 2018
Rokaya El Ansari; Madeleine L. Craze; Maria Diez-Rodriguez; Christopher C. Nolan; Ian O. Ellis; Emad A. Rakha; Andrew R. Green
Breast cancer (BC) is a heterogeneous disease characterised by variant biology, metabolic activity and patient outcome. This study aimed to evaluate the biological and prognostic value of the membrane solute carrier, SLC3A2 in BC with emphasis on the intrinsic molecular subtypes. SLC3A2 was assessed at the genomic level, using METABRIC data (n = 1980), and at the proteomic level, using immunohistochemistry on tissue microarray (TMA) sections constructed from a large well-characterised primary BC cohort (n = 2500). SLC3A2 expression was correlated with clinicopathological parameters, molecular subtypes and patient outcome. SLC3A2 mRNA and protein expression were strongly correlated with higher tumour grade and poor Nottingham prognostic index (NPI). High expression of SLC3A2 was observed in triple-negative (TN), HER2+ and ER+ high-proliferation subtypes. SLC3A2 mRNA and protein expression were significantly associated with the expression of c-MYC in all BC subtypes (p < 0.001). High expression of SLC3A2 protein was associated with poor patient outcome (p < 0.001), but only in the ER+ high-proliferation (p = 0.01) and TN (p = 0.04) subtypes. In multivariate analysis SLC3A2 protein was an independent risk factor for shorter BC-specific survival (p < 0.001). SLC3A2 appears to play a role in the aggressive BC subtypes driven by MYC and could act as a potential prognostic marker. Functional assessment is necessary to reveal its potential therapeutic value in the different BC subtypes.
British Journal of Cancer | 2018
Chitra Joseph; Olivia Macnamara; Madeleine L. Craze; Roslin Russell; Elena Provenzano; Christopher C. Nolan; Maria Diez-Rodriguez; Sultan N. Sonbul; Mohammed A. Aleskandarany; Andrew R. Green; Emad A. Rakha; Ian O. Ellis; Abhik Mukherjee
BackgroundMediator complex (MED) proteins have a key role in transcriptional regulation, some interacting with the oestrogen receptor (ER). Interrogation of the METABRIC cohort suggested that MED7 may regulate lymphovascular invasion (LVI). Thus MED7 expression was assessed in large breast cancer (BC) cohorts to determine clinicopathological significance.MethodsMED7 gene expression was investigated in the METABRIC cohort (n = 1980) and externally validated using bc-GenExMiner v4.0. Immunohistochemical expression was assessed in the Nottingham primary BC series (n = 1280). Associations with clinicopathological variables and patient outcome were evaluated.ResultsHigh MED7 mRNA and protein expression was associated with good prognostic factors: low grade, smaller tumour size, good NPI, positive hormone receptor status (p < 0.001), and negative LVI (p = 0.04) status. Higher MED7 protein expression was associated with improved BC-specific survival within the whole cohort and ER+/luminal subgroup. Pooled MED7 gene expression data in the external validation cohort confirmed association with better survival, corroborating with the protein expression. On multivariate analysis, MED7 protein was independently predictive of longer BC-specific survival in the whole cohort and Luminal A subtype (p < 0.001).ConclusionsMED7 is an important prognostic marker in BC, particularly in ER+luminal subtypes, associated with improved survival and warrants future functional analysis.
Breast Cancer Research and Treatment | 2018
Sasagu Kurozumi; Chitra Joseph; Sultan N. Sonbul; Kylie L. Gorringe; Marian Pigera; Mohammed A. Aleskandarany; Maria Diez-Rodriguez; Christopher C. Nolan; Takaaki Fujii; Ken Shirabe; Hiroyuki Kuwano; Sarah J. Storr; Stewart G. Martin; Ian O. Ellis; Andrew R. Green; Emad A. Rakha
BackgroundThe functions of many proteins are tightly regulated with a complex array of cellular functions including ubiquitination. In cancer cells, aberrant ubiquitination may promote the activity of oncogenic pathways with subsequent tumour progression. Kelch-like family member 7 (KLHL7) is involved in the regulation of ubiquitination and may play a role in breast cancer (BC). Present study aims to evaluate the biological and clinical usefulness of KLHL7 in BC utilising large well-characterised cohorts with long-term follow-up.MethodsThe relationships between KLHL7 gene copy number alteration (CNA) and mRNA expression and clinicopathological variables and clinical outcomes were evaluated in 1980 patients from the METABRIC BC cohort. Prognostic significance of KLHL7 mRNA was validated using the Breast Cancer Gene-Expression Miner v4.0 datasets (n = 5206). KLHL7 protein expression was assessed using immunohistochemistry in a large annotated series of early-stage BC (n = 917) with long-term follow-up.ResultsKLHL7 CNA was significantly correlated with its mRNA expression. KLHL7 mRNA expression was higher in luminal B and basal-like molecular subtypes and in higher grade tumours. Increased KLHL7 protein expression was significantly correlated with features of aggressive phenotype including lymphovascular invasion, high histological grade, hormonal receptor negativity, high PIK3CA and p53 expression. Outcome analysis showed that high KLHL7 expression is an independent predictor of shorter survival (p = 0.0011).ConclusionsKLHL7 appears to play an important role in BC progression. High KLHL7 protein expression identified a subgroup of BC with aggressive behaviour and provided independent prognostic information.
British Journal of Cancer | 2017
Mohammed A. Aleskandarany; Sultan N. Sonbul; Rachel Surridge; Abhik Mukherjee; Carlos Caldas; Maria Diez-Rodriguez; Ibraheem Ashankyty; Khalil I Albrahim; Ahmed Elmouna; Ritu Aneja; Stewart G. Martin; Ian O. Ellis; Andrew R. Green; Emad A. Rakha
Background:The prognostic value of lymphovascular invasion (LVI) in breast cancer (BC) has been demonstrated in several independent studies. However, identification of driver molecules for LVI remains a challenging task. Large-scale transcriptomic profiling of histologically validated LVI can potentially identify genes that regulate LVI.Methods:Integrative bio-informatics analyses of the METABRIC study were performed utilising a subset of strictly defined LVI using histological and immunohistochemical (IHC) criteria. ARHGAP18 was among the top differentially expressed genes between LVI+ and LVI− BC with a 1.8-fold change. The prognostic impact of ARHGAP18 gene expression was assessed in the METABRIC data set (n=1980) and externally validated using the online BC gene expression data sets utilising bc-GenExMiner v4.0 (n=2016). Subsequently, ARHGAP18 protein expression was assessed on a large cohort of invasive BC (n=959) with long-term follow-up using IHC.Results:Pooled analysis of ARHGAP18 mRNA expression showed that overexpression was associated with better outcome (P<0.001, hazard ratio (HR)=0.82, 95% CI 0.75–0.90). ARHGAP18 protein was expressed in the cytoplasm and nuclei of the tumour cells and its expression was positively associated with good prognostic variables. Lack of cytoplasmic expression showed associations with LVI (P=0.006), epithelial-mesenchymal transition and the HER+ subtype (P=0.01). Loss of nuclear expression was associated with higher grade, HER2+ and high Ki67LI (P=0.001). Cytoplasmic and nuclear expression showed a positive association with improved survival independent of other variables (P=0.01, HR=0.74, 95% CI 0.60–87).Conclusions:ARHGAP18 expression at transcriptomic and protein levels is associated with improved patients’ outcomes whose deregulation may play a role in tumour progression and the development of LVI in BC. Further assessment of its potential therapeutic value in BC is warranted.
Modern Pathology | 2018
Sultan N. Sonbul; Mohammed A. Aleskandarany; Sasagu Kurozumi; Chitra Joseph; Michael S. Toss; Maria Diez-Rodriguez; Christopher C. Nolan; Abhik Mukherjee; Stewart G. Martin; Carlos Caldas; Ian O. Ellis; Andrew R. Green; Emad A. Rakha
Lymphovascular invasion is strongly related to breast cancer metastasis. However, the underlying mechanisms of lymphovascular invasion and its driver molecules in breast cancer remain to be defined. In this study, we explore differential expression of genes in large molecularly characterized and clinically annotated datasets of invasive breast cancer patients (n = 8056) coupled with histological review and strict definition for lymphovascular invasion status. The METABRIC series was used to identify genes associated with lymphovascular invasion, as defined using hematoxylin and eosin staining supplemented by immunohistochemistry, at the genomic/transcriptomic levels. Saccharomyces cerevisiae-like 1 (SEC14L1) was identified as one of the most significant genes associated with lymphovascular invasion. The prognostic significance of SEC14L1 gene copy number and mRNA expression was further investigated in the METABRIC series and externally validated using the Breast Cancer Gene-Expression Miner v4.0. Protein expression of SEC14L1 was also assessed using immunohistochemistry in series of early stage breast cancer using tissue microarrays. SEC14L1 gene copy number gain was significantly associated with high histological grade and poor outcome. SEC14L1 mRNA expression showed positive association with higher grade, lymph node metastasis, and poor outcome. SEC14L1 protein overexpression was significantly associated with lymphovascular invasion (p < 0.0001), higher grade (p = 0.011), HER2 positivity (p = 0.036), and shorter survival (p = 0.00075). Our findings specify SEC14L1 as an independent prognostic factor in breast cancer. Its association, at both transcriptome and protein expression levels, with lymphovascular invasion and outcome could imply an important role in tumor progression. A further mechanistic insight into its molecular roles including potential therapeutic utility is warranted.
Modern Pathology | 2018
Islam Miligy; Kylie L. Gorringe; Michael S. Toss; Abdulbaqi Al-kawaz; Peter T. Simpson; Maria Diez-Rodriguez; Christopher C. Nolan; Ian O. Ellis; Andrew R. Green; Emad A. Rakha
Current clinicopathological parameters are useful predictors of breast ductal carcinoma in situ behavior, but they are insufficient to define high-risk patients for disease progression precisely. Thioredoxin-interacting protein (TXNIP) is a key player of oxidative stress. This study aims to evaluate the role of TXNIP as a predictor of ductal carcinoma in situ progression. Tissue microarrays from 776 pure ductal carcinoma in situ and 239 mixed ductal carcinoma in situ and invasive tumors were constructed. All patients were treated at a single institution with a long-term follow-up and TXNIP expression was assessed using immunohistochemistry. TXNIP expression was investigated in terms of associations with clinicopathological and molecular features and patient outcome. Loss/reduced cytoplasmic expression of TXNIP was associated with features of aggressiveness including high nuclear grade (p = 1.6 × 10−5), presence of comedo necrosis (p = 0.001), and estrogen receptor negative (ER−)/HER2− ductal carcinoma in situ (p = 4.6 × 10−5). Univariate analysis showed an inverse association between TXNIP expression and outcome in terms of shorter local recurrence-free survival (p = 0.009). Multivariable analyses showed that independent predictors of ductal carcinoma in situ recurrence were low TXNIP expression (p = 0.005, HR = 0.51, and 95% CI: 0.32–0.81), larger ductal carcinoma in situ size, and high nuclear grade. TXNIP functions as a tumor suppressor gene with loss of its expression associated with ductal carcinoma in situ recurrence. TXNIP can be used as a potentially useful marker in prognostic stratification of ductal carcinoma in situ for management decisions.