Impact of BRCA mutations, age, surgical indication, and hormone status on the molecular phenotype of the human Fallopian tube.

Publication Title

Nat Commun

Document Type

Article

Publication Date

3-26-2025

Keywords

washington; swedish cancer

Abstract

The human Fallopian tube (FT) is an important organ in the female reproductive system and has been implicated as a site of origin for pelvic serous cancers, including high-grade serous tubo-ovarian carcinoma (HGSC). We have generated comprehensive whole-genome bisulfite sequencing, RNA-seq, and proteomic data of over 100 human FTs, with detailed clinical covariate annotations. Our results challenge existing paradigms that extensive epigenetic, transcriptomic and proteomic alterations exist in the FTs from women carrying heterozygous germline BRCA1/2 pathogenic variants. We find minimal differences between BRCA1/2 carriers and non-carriers prior to loss of heterozygosity. Covariates such as age and surgical indication can confound BRCA1/2-related differences reported in the literature, mainly through their impact on cell composition. We systematically document and highlight the degree of variations across normal human FT, defining five groups capturing major cellular and molecular changes across various reproductive stages, pregnancy, and aging. We are able to associate gene, protein, and epigenetic changes with these and other clinical covariates, but not heterozygous BRCA1/2 mutation status. This sheds new light into prevention and early detection of tumorigenesis in populations at high-risk for ovarian cancer.

Area of Special Interest

Cancer

Area of Special Interest

Women & Children

Specialty/Research Institute

Oncology

Specialty/Research Institute

Oncology

Specialty/Research Institute

Pathology & Laboratory Medicine

DOI

10.1038/s41467-025-58145-2

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