Outlier Overexpression Of Genes Involved In Fatty Acid Metabolism And Processing Define Two Aggressive Prostate Cancer Phenotypes

CANCER RESEARCH(2016)

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摘要
Major shifts in fatty acid metabolism are part of the malignant phenotype of many types of cancer, including prostate cancer. We have used a biopsy based approach to characterize high grade prostate cancers in both African American and European American patients. This approach allows us to analyze prostate cancers from patients whose disease is too advanced for radical prostatectomy and who are thus not represented in the study specimens available from conventional biorepositories. mRNA gene expression profiling of high grade prostate cancers from biopsies revealed cancer subtypes with very high (u003e10 fold) levels of overexpression of fatty acid binding protein 5 (FABP5) and fatty acid synthase (FASN). Interestingly, these prostate cancer subtypes showed an either-or phenotype, with “super-overexpression” of either FABP5 or FASN but not both. These findings suggest two “outlier” prostate cancer subtypes with striking differences in the pathways that drive a shift in tumor fatty acid metabolism; one is a fatty acid synthase (FASN) dominant phenotype and the other a previously unrecognized fatty acid binding protein (FABP5) dominant phenotype. In contrast, prostate cancers with lower levels of FABP5 and/or FASN overexpression (2-4 fold) often co-overexpressed both of these genes. Immunohistochemical analyses confirmed prostate cancer FABP5 and FASN overexpression; both showed strong cytoplasmic staining. FABP5 also showed robust nuclear staining consistent with its proposed role in regulating fatty acid mediated gene expression. At both the mRNA and protein levels, the high grade prostate cancers with the highest levels of FABP5 over-expression were more common in African Americans, while the highest levels FASN overexpression were more common in prostate cancers from European Americans. These findings may provide the basis for more effective dietary interventions and targeted therapies for African American and European American patients with these two different subtypes of high grade prostate cancer. Citation Format: Sandra M. Gaston, Kerry Dehimer, James Kearns, Kyle-Ravi Chinsky, Dennis Otali, Denise Oelschlager, Soroush Rais-Bahrami, Jeffrey W. Nix, Peter Kolettis, George W. Adams, William E. Grizzle. Outlier overexpression of genes involved in fatty acid metabolism and processing define two aggressive prostate cancer phenotypes. [abstract]. In: Proceedings of the 107th Annual Meeting of the American Association for Cancer Research; 2016 Apr 16-20; New Orleans, LA. Philadelphia (PA): AACR; Cancer Res 2016;76(14 Suppl):Abstract nr 20.
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