Molecular and Cellular Pathology

British Journal of Cancer (2002) 86, 899–904. doi:10.1038/sj.bjc.6600190 www.bjcancer.com
Published online 18 March 2002

Prostate-Specific Ets (PSE) factor: a novel marker for detection of metastatic breast cancer in axillary lymph nodes

M Mitas1, K Mikhitarian1, L Hoover1, M A Lockett1, L Kelley2, A Hill2, W E Gillanders1 and D J Cole1

  1. 1Department of Surgery, Suite 420, Medical University of South Carolina, Charleston, SC 29425, USA
  2. 2Department of Surgery, National University of Ireland, Dublin, Ireland

Correspondence: M Mitas, E-mail: mitasm@musc.edu

Received 5 October 2001; Revised 7 January 2002; Accepted 9 January 2002.

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Abstract

Prostate Specific Ets factor is a recently identified transcriptional activator that is overexpressed in prostate cancer. To determine whether this gene is overexpressed in breast cancer, we performed a virtual Northern blot using data available online at the Cancer Genome Anatomy Project website. Ninety-five SAGE libraries were probed with a unique sequence tag to the Prostate Specific Ets gene. The results indicate that Prostate Specific Ets is expressed in 14 out of 15 breast cancer libraries (93%), nine out of 10 prostate cancer libraries (90%), three out of 40 libraries from other cancers (7.5%), and four out of 30 normal tissue libraries (13%). To determine the possibility that the Prostate Specific Ets gene is a novel marker for detection of metastatic breast cancer in axillary lymph nodes, quantitative real-time RT–PCR analyses were performed. The mean level of Prostate Specific Ets expression in lymph nodes containing metastatic breast cancer (n=22) was 410-fold higher than in normal lymph node (n=51). A receiver operator characteristic curve analysis indicated that Prostate Specific Ets was overexpressed in 18 out of 22 lymph nodes containing metastatic breast cancer (82%). The receiver operator characteristic curve analysis also indicated that the diagnostic accuracy of the Prostate Specific Ets gene for detection of metastatic breast cancer in axillary lymph nodes was 0.949. These results provide evidence that Prostate Specific Ets is a potentially informative novel marker for detection of metastatic breast cancer in axillary lymph nodes, and should be included in any study that involves molecular profiling of breast cancer.

Keywords:

virtual Northern blot, receiver operator characteristic curve, gene overexpression, SYBR Green I, real-time RT–PCR