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      Centrosome Amplification: A Suspect in Breast Cancer and Racial Disparities

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      1 , 1 , 1
      Endocrine-related cancer

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          Abstract

          The multifaceted involvement of centrosome amplification (CA) in tumorigenesis is coming into focus following years of meticulous experimentation, which have elucidated the powerful abilities of CA to promote cellular invasion, disrupt stem cell division, drive chromosomal instability (CIN), and perturb tissue architecture, activities that can accelerate tumor progression. Integration of the extant in vitro, in vivo, and clinical data suggests that in some tissues CA may be a tumor-initiating event, in others a consequential “hit” in multistep tumorigenesis, and in still others non-tumorigenic. However, in vivo data are limited, do not specifically include breast models, and primarily focus on PLK4 (which has CA-independent mechanisms by which it promotes aggressive cellular phenotypes). In vitro breast cancer models suggest that CA can promote tumorigenesis in breast cancer cells in the setting of p53 loss or mutation, which can both trigger CA and promote cellular tolerance to its tendency to slow proliferation and induce aneuploidy. It is thus our perspective that CA is likely an early hit in multistep breast tumorigenesis that may sometimes be lost to preserve aggressive karyotypes acquired through centrosome clustering-mediated CIN, both numerical and structural. We also envision that the robust link between p53 and CA may underlie, to a considerable degree, racial health disparity in breast cancer outcomes. This question is clinically significant because, if it is true, then analysis of centrosomal profiles and administration of centrosome declustering drugs could prove highly efficacious in risk stratifying breast cancers and treating African American (AA) women with breast cancer.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          9436481
          21439
          Endocr Relat Cancer
          Endocr. Relat. Cancer
          Endocrine-related cancer
          1351-0088
          1479-6821
          27 February 2018
          17 May 2017
          September 2017
          01 September 2018
          : 24
          : 9
          : T47-T64
          Affiliations
          [1 ]Georgia State University, Department of Biology, Atlanta, GA
          Author notes
          [* ]Corresponding Author: Ritu Aneja, Department of Biology, Georgia State University, Atlanta, GA, USA, raneja@ 123456gsu.edu ; Phone: 404-413-5417; Fax: 404-413-5301
          Article
          PMC5837860 PMC5837860 5837860 nihpa879242
          10.1530/ERC-17-0072
          5837860
          28515047
          da8ed6bd-ba95-4a0e-99b2-7775ced44804
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