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Member Research & Reports

UNC Study of Mice Finds Weight Loss Reduces Progression of Basal-like Breast Cancer

Obesity, epidemic in the U.S. and worldwide, is one of the important modifiable risk factors for breast cancer, especially a particularly aggressive subtype called basal-like breast cancer (BBC). Population studies have suggested that lifestyle interventions, including weight loss, could prevent a large proportion of this type of cancer; however, data on the effect of weight loss on BBC risk are limited and the mechanisms involved uncertain.

Liza Makowski 1 174

[Photo:Dr. Liza Makowski]

Because BBC is so closely linked to obesity, researchers at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill wondered whether changes in mammary gland tissue, called the microenvironment, were drivers of this aggressive subtype cancer.

Dr. Liza Makowski, assistant professor of nutrition in the UNC Gillings School of Global Public Health and UNC School of Medicine, co-authored the study, “Weight loss reversed obesity-induced HGF/c-Met pathway and basal-like breast cancer progression”, published in Frontiers in Oncology as part of a research feature on “Obesity: An important driving force behind inflammation, altered immunity and cellular metabolism”. Makowski is also a member of the UNC Lineberger Comprehensive Cancer Center.

In previous work, using a unique, genetically engineered mouse model (GEMM) of basil-like breast cancer, Dr. Makowski’s lab induced obesity in adult mice by feeding them a high-fat diet or allowed them to remain lean on control diets.

They found that obesity led to early onset of tumors and increases in a cancer-causing growth factor pathway called HGF/c-Met. Interestingly, the apparent effects of obesity were very strong in normal unaffected mammary glands, more so than in the tumors. Hence, the current study, funded by the Mary Kay Foundation, intended to determine the effect of modification of risk by weight loss on BBC development.

Dr. Sneha Sundaram, postdoctoral fellow in the Makowski lab and lead study author, and colleagues used the same BBC GEMMs. She caused one group of mice to be obese from an early age and maintained their obesity throughout life, and induced another group to lose weight by switching from the obesogenic diet back to the control diet.

“Because we saw more dramatic effects of obesity in the normal mammary gland compared to the tumor,” Dr. Makowski said, “we wanted to see if weight loss before tumors appeared would decrease tumor burden. We could not predict whether the effects of obesity were reversible or not.”

Dr. Makowski and colleagues found that mice who lost weight displayed significantly reduced tumor growth compared to mice that remained obese. Formerly obese mice had the same characteristics as lean mice – including potential obesity-related, cancer-causing mediators such as insulin, a high leptin/adiponectin ratio, and HGF/c-Met pathway – thus demonstrating that oncogenic effects of obesity in this mouse model of BBC are reversible if weight loss occurs prior to overt tumor onset.

Read more: http://sph.unc.edu/sph-news/study-in-mice-finds-weight-loss-reduces-progression-of-basal-like-breast-cancer/