Myoid hamartoma of the breast may be pathogenetically related to benign connective tissue tumors with HMGA2 rearrangements, such as pulmonary hamartomas, lipomas, myolipomas, and leiomyomas.
Relations between EPO mRNA expression, MED12 exon 2 mutation, and HMGA1/HMGA2 mRNA expression levels in leiomyoma samplings, in addition to effects of estrogen (E) on EPO mRNA expression in cultures of leiomyoma cells.
HMGA2 overexpression in ULM is not only related to tumor development but also plays a role in controlling cellular proliferation through the AKT pathway.
In addition, the common clonal origin of tumors overexpressing HMGA2 mRNA and its expression in few myometrial tissue points to HMGA2 up-regulation as an early event in leiomyoma tumorigenesis.
In our study, 60% of cases showed nuclear staining for HMGA2 by immunohistochemistry, which supports the possibility that these tumors harbor aberration of the HMGA2 gene, as seen in lipomas and leiomyomas elsewhere.
MED12 mutations were the most common alterations in conventional and mitotically active leiomyomas and leiomyosarcomas, while leiomyomas with bizarre nuclei were most often FH deficient and cellular tumors showed frequent HMGA2 overexpression.
RAD51 paralog B (RAD51B), the preferential translocation partner of HMGA2, was up-regulated in MED12 mutant lesions, suggesting a role for this gene in the genesis of leiomyomas.
The recent discovery of somatic mutations involving mediator subunit complex 12 (MED12) or high-mobility group AT-hook 2 (HMGA2) in the majority of fibroids and the links to their pathophysiology were also significant advances.
Our work demonstrates that the truncated/short form of HMGA2 induces myometrial cell transformation toward putative tumor-initiating leiomyoma cells and opens up new possibilities to understand the origin of leiomyomas and the development of new therapeutic approaches.
All leiomyomas with HMGA2 overexpression also revealed an activation of PLAG1 in the absence of detectable chromosome 8 abnormalities affecting the PLAG1 locus.
Cells of one genetic subtype of UL, i.e., those with rearrangements of the high mobility AT-hook 2 protein gene (HMGA2), seem to be able to proliferate in vitro for many passages whereas tumor cells from the much more frequent MED12-mutated lesions barely survive even the first passages.
Whereas 70.0% (14/20) HMGA2-mutated fibroids made their appearance as solitary nodules, 85.5% (153/179) MED12-mutated fibroids occurred as multiple nodules as a rule of independent clonal origin, as reflected by different MED12 mutations.
When we further examined HMGA2 expression in all leiomyomas and leiomyosarcomas, we found that HMGA2 overexpression was exclusively present in those leiomyomas with no MED12 mutation, accounting for 10.1% (18/178) of total leiomyomas and 40% (18/45) of non-MED12 mutant leiomyomas.
However, genetic alterations (especially MED12 and HMGA2) and involvement of epigenetic mechanisms (DNA methylation, histone modifications, and microRNA) in leiomyoma provide the clue of initiator of this tumor.
Truncated transcripts were apparently predominant in roughly one-third of UL with chromosomal rearrangements affecting the HMGA2 locus, where they lead to a higher stability of its transcripts and subsequently contribute to the overexpression of the protein.
The hypothesis that TC227 is a pathogenic variant is supported by a trend towards higher HMGA2 expression in TC227 allele-positive compared with non-TC227 UL tissue as well as by absence of culpable exonic sequence variants.
Recently it has been shown that repression of HMGA2 by microRNA let-7s is a critical molecular regulatory mechanism associated with tumour growth in many tumours and cell types, including leiomyomas.