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Departments of 1 Oncology, 2 Pathology and Laboratory Medicine, and 3 Biostatistics and Medical Informatics; 4 Institute for Molecular Virology; and 5 Howard Hughes Medical Institute, University of Wisconsin-Madison, Madison, Wisconsin
Requests for reprints: Bill Sugden, Department of Oncology, 814 McArdle Laboratory for Cancer Research, 1400 University Avenue, Madison, WI 53706. E-mail: sugden{at}oncology.wisc.edu
| Abstract |
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| Introduction |
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herpesvirus, is a risk factor for developing Burkitt's lymphoma, nasopharyngeal carcinoma, post-transplant lymphoproliferative disorder, a subset of Hodgkin lymphomas, and gastric carcinomas (1). In these cancers, for which epidemiologic and molecular virological data support a causal link, EBV DNA and one or more viral gene products have been detected in the majority of tumor cells (1). Recently, EBV was implicated as a possible contributor to a subset of breast carcinomas (2). The data bearing on this putative association of EBV with breast cancer are, however, contradictory and therefore inconclusive. These contradictions reflect the different assays used, their different sensitivities, and different definitions of "EBV positive". Two general targets have been used in attempts to detect EBV in breast tumor samples: viral products such as the EBV-encoded small RNAs (EBER); small RNAs transcribed by RNA polymerase III; or EBNA1, a nuclear protein essential for maintaining the viral genome and the viral genome DNA itself. The EBERs can be expressed in cells in culture to levels as high as 107 copies per cell and when expressed efficiently can be detected confidently by in situ hybridization (3, 4). EBNA1 can be detected by immunohistochemistry but its detection is often not robust and can be "nonspecific" (5). The detection of EBERs and EBNA1 in breast tumor samples has ranged from 42% being positive for EBNA1 (6) or 25% of samples being positive for EBNA1 with a mostly nonoverlapping 10% being positive for EBERs (7) to no samples being positive for EBNA1 or for EBERs (8-11). The detection of EBV DNA by Southern blotting or PCR methods in breast cancers has ranged from being as high as 21%, 31%, and 51% being positive (12-14) to as low as 6% to 10% of samples being positive (7, 11, 15). The assays for viral DNA are direct and sensitive but have suffered from lack of normalization of the data to the number of cell equivalents being assayed (2). The variation in the results of these different assays is illustrated by contrasting three studies that used detection of viral products finding 0 of 210 cases to be EBV positive (8-10) to seven studies that measured viral DNA and found 262 of 955 cases to be EBV positive (6, 7, 15). This variation indicates that EBV gene products may not be expressed detectably in EBV-positive tumor cells. It further illustrates the need to assay for the presence of EBV DNA in breast cancers quantitatively and to normalize these measurements for the number of cells being assayed.
We define "EBV positive" to mean that the majority of tumor cells within a biopsy each have one or more copies of EBV DNA, because this property is found in all human tumors for which EBV is an established, contributing risk factor. We have assayed tumors and matched normal controls by real-time quantitative PCR (RT-QPCR) for the presence of EBV DNA by targeting two regions of the viral genome and have normalized these measurements to the level of cellular DNA measured by RT-QPCR in parallel. This normalization allows a test for tumors being "EBV positive" (i.e., having EBV DNA in the majority of tumor cells) or not.
| Materials and Methods |
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As detailed in Table 1, the case series was representative of current clinical practice. Patient ages ranged from 29 to 83 years with a median of 57 years. Histologically, the tumors fell into four categories: 37 (82%) infiltrating ductal, 4 (9%) infiltrating lobular, 3 (7%) tubular carcinomas, and 1 (2.2%) mucinous carcinoma. According to the modified Bloom Richardson grading guidelines, 13 (29%) carcinomas were classified as grade 3, 17 (38%) as grade 2, and 15 (33%) as grade 1. Tumor sizes varied from 0.4 to 6.0 cm with a median of 1.8 cm. Thirty-four (77%) cases were estrogen receptor positive and 10 (23%) cases were negative. Lymph node sampling data were available from 31 patients: 16 (52%) had lymph node metastases and 15 (48%) were negative.
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Cell Lines
BJAB, 721, and Raji cells were grown in RPMI 1640 supplemented with 10% fetal bovine serum and 100 units/mL penicillin and streptomycin. HeLa cells were grown in DMEM and supplemented as above. All cells were cultured at 37°C with maximum humidity and 5% CO2.
DNA Extraction
Two adjacent 20-µm sections were used to obtain DNA for RT-QPCR analysis. Briefly, samples were dewaxed twice with 1 mL xylene for 10 minutes, washed twice with 100% ethanol, dried and resuspended in 500 µL K buffer [50 mmol/L KCl, 10 mmol/L Tris-HCl (pH 8.3), 2.5 mmol/L MgCl2, 100 µg/mL gelatin, 0.45% IGEPAL, and 0.45% Tween 20]. Proteinase K was added to 100 µg/mL and samples were digested overnight at 55°C. Samples were extracted with phenol and chloroform, ethanol precipitated, and the nucleic acid was dissolved in 100 µL double-distilled water. Five microliters aliquots were used for RT-QPCR.
When extracting DNA from cells in culture, the cells were pelleted and resuspended at 5 x 106 cells per mL in DNA lysis buffer [150 mmol/L NaCl, 2 mmol/L EDTA, 20 mmol/L Tris-HCl (pH 8.0), 1% SDS, and 20 µg/mL proteinase K] followed by overnight digestion at 55°C, phenol and chloroform extractions, and ethanol precipitation. The pellet was dissolved in 400 µL TE [10 mmol/L Tris-HCl and 1 mmol/L EDTA (pH 8.0)] with 100 µg/mL RNase A and incubated for 1 hour at 37°C. Phenol/chloroform extractions and ethanol precipitation were repeated and the final DNA pellet was dissolved in 100 µL TE.
Real-time Quantitative PCR
RT-QPCR was used to determine the number of cells in a given tissue section, based on ß-actin gene content, as well as the number of molecules of EBV based on two distinct viral probes. Ten nanograms of DNA extracted from EBV-positive and EBV-negative cell lines served as controls and water was used to test for DNA contamination in the reagents. RT-QPCR conditions were as follows: 1x Amplitaq Gold PCR Master Mix (Applied Biosystems, Foster City, CA), 0.5 µmol/L each primer, 0.2 µmol/L probe, 1x ROX reference dye (Invitrogen, Carlsbad, CA), and water to 20 µL. PCR cycling conditions were 50°C for 2 minutes, 95°C for 10 minutes followed by 40 cycles of 95°C for 15 seconds, and 60°C for 1 minute. The following oligonucleotide sequences were used for RT-QPCR primers and probes: ß-actin, forward primer 5'-TCACCCACACTGTGCCCATCTACGA-3', reverse primer 5'-TGAGGTAGTCAGTCAGGTCCCG-3', and probe 5'-ATGCCC TCCCCCATGCCATCCTGCGT-3'; Raji, forward primer 5'-TGACCTACTTGGACCATGTGGA-3', reverse primer 5'-TGATGAGACTTCCGAGTGCACT-3', and probe 5'-CAGTGTCCTGATCCTGGACCTTGACTATGAA-3'; BALF 5, forward primer 5'-CGGAAGCCCTCTGGACTTC-3', reverse primer 5'-CCCTGTTTATCCGATGGAATG-3', and probe 5'-TGTACACGCACGAGAAATGCGCC-3'.
EBER In situ Hybridization
In situ hybridization for EBER detection was carried out on selected samples using a commercial kit (Novocastra Laboratories, Newcastle upon Tyne, United Kingdom). Samples were analyzed by microscopy for EBER-stained nuclei. Formalin-fixed, paraffin-embedded sections from EBV-positive nasopharyngeal carcinoma and post-transplant lymphoproliferative disease and the EBV-negative lymphoblastoid cell line BJAB were used as controls.
Statistical Methods
Duplicate measurements were averaged geometrically. The benefit in the context of low signal is that a positive average implies positive in both duplicates. Two such averages were available for each probe in both normal and tumor sections. To test for differences between tumor and normal on a given probe, measurements were first transformed to their ranks among all measurements for that probe; ties were broken by averaging ranks. The rank transformation alleviates potential instability caused by variation over orders of magnitude. For each subject, a difference was calculated between the average of the two normal ranks and the average of the tumor ranks; these differences were accumulated over subjects to obtain a test statistic, which was then calibrated by shuffling ranks within subjects and recomputing the test statistic. This permutation approach accommodates the matched-pair structure and produces an exact significance test (16). All computations were done using the R system for statistical computing (17).
| Results |
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The number of cell genomes or cell equivalents in each sample was measured using RT-QPCR for ß-actin, simultaneously insuring that each sample could support detection of amplifiable DNA. The ß-actin assays provided an unexpected insight. For many extracts from archived, formalin-fixed, paraffin-embedded biopsies, ß-actin sequences could be amplified with primers that yielded a 92-bp product but could not be detected in the same samples using primers that gave rise to a 295-bp product. DNA degradation in the archived samples explains this discrepancy because both primer pairs amplified ß-actin DNA in samples prepared freshly from cell lines. We therefore used EBV and ß-actin primers yielding 89- to 117-bp products for all measurements.
Each of 45 pairs of tissue biopsies was assessed histologically for the fraction of tumor cells using a section flanking that used to extract DNA (Table 1). These assessments indicated that whereas some tumor samples with few cells and a low fraction of tumor cells had on the order of 10 tumor cells, most tumor samples contained 100s to 1,000s of tumors cells. However, neither EBV probe measured a significant difference in EBV DNA concentration between tumor and normal samples (P > 0.5). For the majority of tumor samples tested, for which 10% to 66% of the tissue was comprised of tumor cells, <1% of these cells could have even one copy of EBV DNA (Table 1). Additional computations confirmed the absence of a tumor/normal difference when ß-actin normalization was made via regression analysis rather than straight division (data not shown). EBV DNA levels in tumor samples and matched normal samples approximated those in DNA preparations from EBV-negative cell lines, which averaged 0.001 to 0.03 molecules of EBV DNA per cell and thus likely reflect noise in the assays. The occasional outlying, high signals (Fig. 1) may reflect rare EBV-infected cells, including infiltrating lymphocytes that harbor multiple copies of viral DNA.
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Eleven samples that had one or more measurements of >0.01 EBV DNA molecules per cell were tested by EBER in situ hybridization. None of these samples had EBER-stained nuclei in tumor or normal epithelial cells nor in any infiltrating lymphocytes of the biopsy section (data not shown). Post-transplant lymphoproliferative disorder samples served as positive controls, whereas formalin-fixed, paraffin-embedded BJAB sections served as a negative control. The absence of detectable EBER staining indicates either that the signals in the RT-QPCR represent noise in the assay, or that rare EBV-positive cells are present in one but not another section of a given sample.
| Discussion |
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1 molecule of EBV DNA per 1,000 molecules of cell DNA for most of the 45 tumor and matched normal samples (Table 1). Sections from selected samples with relatively high EBV DNA measurements were also tested for cells expressing EBERs. No EBER-positive cells were detected, indicating either that the RT-QPCR signals reflect noise or that rare EBV-positive cells exist in some of the tumor and normal samples and could be detected in the 20-µm sections used to isolate DNA but not in the 5-µm sections used to detect EBERs. Overall, these data indicate that EBV was no more common in breast carcinoma cells than in matched normal cells and in both cases, it is usually is present in <1% of the cells. EBV was therefore not associated with breast cancer in this patient population. Lack of a significant difference in EBV DNA concentration between tumor and normal tissues does not reflect a lack of statistical power. The situation is well approximated by a one-sided paired t test using n = 45 matched samples. The noise level in measurements with both EBV probes is <1.0 molecule per cell allowing detection of average differences on the order of one molecule per cell. Our consistent findings are not incompatible with earlier studies that were interpreted to indicate that products of EBV and/or its DNA can be detected in a fraction of breast cancers and therefore is associated with this cancer, but suggest reevaluation of those studies. False-positive results can clearly arise in attempts to detect EBNA1 because of cross-reactivities of some antibodies thought to be "specific" for EBNA1 (5). False-positive results in detection of EBERs can arise from the in situ hybridizations to detect it not being quantitative; low levels of expression of EBERs are distinguishable from background staining only subjectively. There are also difficulties in methods use to detect viral DNA. For example, detection of viral DNA in breast cancers has largely depended on the use of PCR techniques with 35 to 50 cycles of amplification often followed by a second round of amplification or in combination with detection by Southern blotting (7, 11-14). In theory, these methods could detect a single molecule of EBV DNA and thus do not necessarily associate EBV DNA with the tumor cells present in a biopsy. In one instance, microdissected tumor samples with only one EBV DNA molecule per 1,000 cell equivalents have been classified as "EBV positive" (14), whereas in another, samples positive for EBV DNA by PCR but negative by the less sensitive Southern blotting were considered not significant (7). The extreme sensitivity of PCR-mediated detection of DNA, coupled with the varying definitions of "EBV-positive" have led to conflicting interpretations of EBV's potential association with breast cancer. In addition, where EBV DNA was detected more often in tumor than normal tissue, the increased cellularity of tumor relative to normal samples could have favored detection of occasional EBV-infected cells in tumor samples over normal samples. The sporadic presence of such infected cells could not be appreciated without normalizing the level of viral DNA detected to the total cellular DNA assayed. It is also evident that rare breast cancers may contain many cells infected with EBV. However, we did not encounter such exceptions in these 45 cases.
| Acknowledgments |
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| Footnotes |
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The costs of publication of this article were defrayed in part by the payment of page charges.This article must therefore be hereby marked advertisement in accordance with 18 U.S.C.Section 1734 solely to indicate this fact.
Note: P. Ahlquist is a Howard Hughes Medical Institute investigator. B. Sugden is an American Cancer Society research professor.
Received 10/18/04; accepted 11/19/04.
| References |
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