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Query: UMLS:C0376358 (
prostate cancer
)
59,338
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Prostate cancer
is the most common cancer among men in many countries. Although the etiology of
prostate cancer
largely is unknown, both genetic and environmental factors may be involved. Advanced age, androgen metabolism, and heredity-race have been reported to be possible risk factors. On the other hand, several studies indicate that genetic polymorphisms in biotransformation enzymes play a role in
prostate cancer
development. In this study, association of the
prostate cancer
risk with genotype frequencies of the Phase I (
CYP1A1
) and Phase II (GSTM1 and GSTT1) biotransformation enzymes was investigated in 321 Turkish individuals (152
prostate cancer
patients and 169 age-matched male controls). The presence or absences of the GSTM1 and GSTT1 genes were determined by a PCR-based method. Genotypes of
CYP1A1
were determined by MspI-RFLP. The prevalence of GSTM1 null genotype in the cases was 64 percent, compared to 31 percent in the control group, indicating a strong association (OR = 4.08, 95%CI = 2.50-6.69). No association was observed between either GSTT1 null genotype or
CYP1A1
polymorphism and
prostate cancer
incidence. No statistically significant association was observed between smoking status of the patients and any of the polymorphisms studied. In conclusion, results of this study indicate that only the GSTM1 null genotype may play an important role as a risk factor for
prostate cancer
development in Turkish population.
...
PMID:Polymorphisms of CYP1A1, GSTM1, GSTT1, and prostate cancer risk in Turkish population. 1646 91
Flutamide (2-methyl-N-[4-nitro-3-(trifluoromethyl)phenyl]-propanamide), a nonsteroidal antiandrogen, is used in the treatment of
prostate cancer
but is occasionally associated with hepatic dysfunction. In the present study, the metabolism of flutamide including the formation of the possible reactive toxic metabolites was investigated using human liver microsomes and 10 isoforms of recombinant human cytochrome P450 (P450). 2-Hydroxyflutamide (OH-flutamide) and 4-nitro-3-(trifluoromethyl)phenylamine (FLU-1) were the main products of flutamide metabolism in human liver microsomes. The formation of OH-flutamide was markedly inhibited by ellipticine, an inhibitor of
CYP1A1
/1A2, and was mainly catalyzed by the recombinant CYP1A2. FLU-1 was also produced from OH-flutamide, but its metabolic rate was much less than that from flutamide. An inhibitor of carboxylesterase, bis-(p-nitrophenyl)phosphoric acid, completely inhibited the formation of FLU-1 from flutamide in human liver microsomes. A new metabolite, N-[4-nitro-3-(trifluoromethyl)phenyl]hydroxylamine (FLU-1-N-OH), was detected as a product of the reaction of FLU-1 with human liver microsomes and identified by comparison with the synthetic standard. The formation of FLU-1-N-OH was markedly inhibited by the addition of miconazole, an inhibitor of CYP3A4, and was mediated by recombinant CYP3A4. Furthermore, FLU-1-N-OH was detected mostly as the conjugates (glucuronide/sulfate) in the urine of
prostate cancer
patients collected for 3 h after treatment with flutamide. The formation of FLU-1-N-OH, however, did not differ between patients with and without abnormalities of hepatic functions among a total of 29 patients. The lack of an apparent association of the urinary excretion of FLU-1-N-OH and hepatic disorder may suggest the involvement of an additional unknown factor in the mechanisms of flutamide hepatotoxicity.
...
PMID:Detection of a new N-oxidized metabolite of flutamide, N-[4-nitro-3-(trifluoromethyl)phenyl]hydroxylamine, in human liver microsomes and urine of prostate cancer patients. 1650 48
The antiandrogen flutamide (FLU) is used primarily for
prostate cancer
and is an idiosyncratic hepatotoxicant that sometimes causes severe liver problems. To investigate FLU's overt hepatic effects, especially on inducible drug clearance-related gene networks, FLU's hepatic gene expression profile was examined in female Sprague-Dawley rats using approximately 22,500 oligonucleotide microarrays. Rats were dosed daily for 3 days with FLU at 500, 250, 62.5, 31.3, and 15.6 mg/kg/day, and hepatic RNA was isolated. FLU resulted in the dose-dependent regulation of approximately 350 genes. Employing a gene-response compendium, FLU was compared with three classical aryl hydrocarbon receptor (AhR) ligands, 3-methylcholanthrene, benzo[a]pyrene, and beta-naphthoflavone, and four atypical CYP1A inducers, indole-3-carbinol (I3C), omeprazole (OME), chlorpromazine (CPZ), and clotrimazole (CLO). The FLU gene response was comparable with classical AhR ligands across a signature AhR ligand gene set that included
CYP1A1
and other members of the AhR gene battery. Dose-related responses of CYP1 genes established a maximum response ceiling and discerned potency differences in atypical inducers. FLU had a sharp down-regulation of c-fos that was comparable with all the compounds except CPZ and CLO. FLU absorption, distribution, metabolism, and excretion (ADME) gene expression analysis revealed that FLU, as well as I3C and OME, induced CYP2B and CYP3A, distinguishing them from the classical AhR ligands. By using a compendium of gene expression profiles, FLU was shown to signal in rats similar to an AhR activator with additional CYP2B and CYP3A effects that most resembled the ADME gene expression pattern of the atypical CYP1A inducers I3C and OME.
...
PMID:Profiling the hepatic effects of flutamide in rats: a microarray comparison with classical aryl hydrocarbon receptor ligands and atypical CYP1A inducers. 1661 58
The relationship between cigarette smoking and
prostate cancer
remains unclear. Any potential association may depend on the individuals' ability to metabolize and detoxify cigarette carcinogens--such as polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons. To investigate this, we studied the association between
prostate cancer
and smoking, as well as the main and modifying effects of functional polymorphisms in genes that metabolize polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (
CYP1A1
Ile(462)Val, microsomal epoxide hydrolase His(139)Arg) and detoxify reactive derivatives (GSTM1 null deletion, GSTT1 null deletion, GSTP1 Ile(105)Val and Ala(114)Val) using a family-based case-control design (439
prostate cancer
cases and 479 brother controls). Within the entire study population, there were no main effects for smoking or any of the polymorphisms. However, the nondeleted GSTM1 allele was inversely associated with
prostate cancer
[odds ratio (OR), 0.50; 95% confidence interval (95% CI), 0.26-0.94] among men with less aggressive disease (Gleason score < 7 and clinical tumor stage < T2c) and positively associated (OR, 1.68; 95% CI, 1.01-2.79) with
prostate cancer
in men with more aggressive disease (Gleason score > or = 7 or clinical tumor stage > or = T2c). We also found a statistically significant negative multiplicative interaction between the GSTM1 nondeleted allele and heavy smoking (> 20 pack-years) in the total study population (P = 0.01) and in Caucasians (P = 0.01). Among Caucasians, heavy smoking increased
prostate cancer
risk nearly 2-fold in those with the GSTM1 null genotype (OR, 1.73; 95% CI, 0.99-3.05) but this increased risk was not observed in heavy smokers who carried the GSTM1 nondeleted allele (OR, 0.95; 95% CI, 0.53-1.71). Our results highlight the importance of considering genetic modifiers of carcinogens when evaluating smoking in
prostate cancer
.
...
PMID:Polymorphisms in polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbon metabolism and conjugation genes, interactions with smoking and prostate cancer risk. 1661 20
CYP1A1
activates environmental procarcinogens and catalyzes oxidative metabolism of estrogens and is likely to play an important role in the etiology of
prostate cancer
. To evaluate this phenomenon, the association between two single nucleotide polymorphisms (A to G transition in exon7 leading to amino acid substitution Ile462Val and T3801C at 3'UTR) of
CYP1A1
gene in
prostate cancer
were analyzed in a case-control study of 100 individuals in South Indian population. The estimated relative risk was significantly high for individuals with w1/m1 genotype at 3'UTR of
CYP1A1
gene (OR-4.64; 95%CI = 1.51-14.86; P < 0.01) whereas the
CYP1A1
Ile/Val genotype (w2/m2) on exon 7 was found to be associated with a decreased risk for
prostate cancer
(OR-0.17; 95%CI = 0.02-0.89; P=0.03). A Stratified analysis of the genotypes with age of onset and tumor grade showed the w1/m1 genotype to be significantly associated with an early age of onset; however the tumor grades did not have significant association with the variant genotypes. Thus the present study indicates that individuals with the variant w1/m1 genotype exhibit an increased risk while those with w2/m2 genotype exhibit a decreased risk for
prostate cancer
.
...
PMID:Cytochrome p4501A1 gene variants as susceptibility marker for prostate cancer. 1719 49
Sex hormones have been implicated in prostate carcinogenesis and are thought to modulate cell proliferation and growth. To investigate the association between polymorphisms in hormone-related genes and
prostate cancer
risk, we conducted a two-stage, case-control study within the screening arm of the Prostate, Lung, Colorectal, and Ovarian Cancer Screening Trial. Using DNA extracted from blood specimens, we initially genotyped 14 single nucleotide polymorphisms in genes involved in hormone regulation or metabolism (AKR1C3,
CYP1A1
, CYP1B1, CYP3A4, ESR1, GNRH1, HSD173B, HSD3B2, SHBG, and SRD5A2) in 488
prostate cancer
cases and 617 matched controls. Heterozygotes at SHBG D356N were found to be associated with an increased risk of
prostate cancer
compared with the homozygous wild type, particularly among non-Hispanic whites (odds ratio, 1.54; 95% confidence interval, 1.13-2.09; P = 0.006). No significant associations were observed with the other polymorphisms. The SHBG D356N polymorphism, which has potential functional significance, was subsequently genotyped in additional 769 cases and 1,168 controls. Overall, SHBG D356N heterozygotes were found to have an increased risk of
prostate cancer
among whites (odds ratio, 1.34; 95% confidence interval, 1.10-1.63; P = 0.0007). This study suggests that genetic variation in SHBG may influence
prostate cancer
susceptibility.
...
PMID:Variant in sex hormone-binding globulin gene and the risk of prostate cancer. 1722 Mar 47
Previous studies suggest that enzymes involved in the androgen metabolic pathway are susceptibility factors for
prostate cancer
. Estrogen metabolites functioning as genotoxins have also been proposed as risk factors. In this study, we systematically tested the hypothesis that common genetic variations for those enzymes involved in the androgen and estrogen metabolic pathways increase risk for sporadic and familial
prostate cancer
. From these two pathways, 46 polymorphisms (34 single nucleotide polymorphisms, 10 short tandem repeat polymorphisms, and 2 null alleles) in 25 genes were tested for possible associations. Those genes tested included PRL, LHB, CYP11A1, HSD3B1, HSD3B2, HSD17B2, CYP17, SRD5A2, AKR1C3, UGT2B15, AR, SHBG, and KLK3 from the androgen pathway and CYP19, HSD17B1,
CYP1A1
, CYP1A2, CYP1B1, COMT, GSTP1, GSTT1, GSTM1, NQO1, ESR1, and ESR2 from the estrogen pathway. A case-control study design was used with two sets of cases: familial cases with a strong
prostate cancer
family history (n = 438 from 178 families) and sporadic cases with a negative
prostate cancer
family history (n = 499). The controls (n = 493) were derived from a population-based collection. Our results provide suggestive findings for an association with either familial or sporadic
prostate cancer
with polymorphisms in four genes: AKR1C3, HSD17B1, NQO1, and GSTT1. Additional suggestive findings for an association with clinical variables (disease stage, grade, and/or node status) were observed for single nucleotide polymorphisms in eight genes: HSD3B2, SRD5A2, SHBG, ESR1,
CYP1A1
, CYP1B1, GSTT1, and NQO1. However, none of the findings were statistically significant after appropriate corrections for multiple comparisons. Given that the point estimates for the odds ratio for each of these polymorphisms are <2.0, much larger sample sizes will be required for confirmation.
...
PMID:Evaluation of genetic variations in the androgen and estrogen metabolic pathways as risk factors for sporadic and familial prostate cancer. 1750 24
Polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbon (PAH)-DNA adducts may induce mutations that contribute to carcinogenesis. We evaluated potential associations between smoking and polymorphisms in PAH metabolism [
CYP1A1
Ile 462Val, CYP1B1 Ala 119Ser and Leu 432Val, microsomal epoxide hydrolase (mEH) Tyr 113His and His139Arg, CYP3A4 A(-392)G] and conjugation [glutathione S-transferase (GST) M1 null deletion, GSTP1 Ile 105Val] genes and PAH-DNA adduct levels (measured by immunohistochemistry) in tumor and nontumor prostate cells in 400
prostate cancer
cases. Although no statistically significant associations were observed in the total sample, stratification by ethnicity revealed that Caucasian ever smokers compared with nonsmokers had higher adduct levels in tumor cells (mean staining intensity in absorbance units +/- SE, 0.1748 +/- 0.0052 versus 0.1507 +/- 0.0070; P = 0.006), and Caucasians carrying two mEH 139Arg compared with two 139His alleles had lower adducts in tumor (0.1320 +/- 0.0129 versus 0.1714 +/- 0.0059; P = 0.006) and nontumor (0.1856 +/- 0.0184 versus 0.2291 +/- 0.0085; P = 0.03) cells. African Americans with two CYP1B1 432Val compared with two 432Ile alleles had lower adducts in tumor cells (0.1600 +/- 0.0060 versus 0.1970 +/- 0.0153; P = 0.03). After adjusting for smoking status, carrying the putative "high-risk" genotype combination, the faster metabolism of PAH-epoxides to PAH-diol-epoxides (CYP1B1 432Val/Val and mEH 139Arg/Arg) with lower PAH-diol-epoxide conjugation (GSTP1 (105)Ile/Ile), was associated with increased adducts only in Caucasian nontumor cells (0.2363 +/- 0.0132 versus 0.1920 +/- 0.0157; P= 0.05). We present evidence, for the first time in human prostate that the association between smoking and PAH-DNA adducts differs by race and is modified by common genetic variants.
...
PMID:Associations between smoking, polymorphisms in polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbon (PAH) metabolism and conjugation genes and PAH-DNA adducts in prostate tumors differ by race. 1754 91
The role of low penetrance genes and environmental factors in the etiology of
prostate cancer
(PCa) is unclear. Most procarcinogens require metabolic activation by CYP4501A1, whereas microsomal epoxide hydrolase (mEH) is involved in the detoxification. In our case-control study, we assessed whether
CYP1A1
and mEH susceptibility genotypes, tobacco use, and age factors contribute to PCa risk. One hundred thirty patients with PCa and 140 control subjects were analyzed by polymerase chain reaction/restriction fragment length polymorphism (PCR/RFLP) method from genomic DNA samples. Binary logistic regression model was used for assessing differences in genotype prevalence and their association between patient and the control group. T/C polymorphism of
CYP1A1
gene revealed significant association with the tobacco users (p < 0.005) for PCa risk. Our results demonstrated significant association with exon 3 variant genotypes of the mEH alone or in combination with tobacco users (p < 0.005), whereas in exon 4 genotypes, no association was observed. Haplotype analysis projected significant associations with very slow haplotypes of mEH gene (OR = 2.48, 95% CI = 1.41-4.38, p = 0.002). In conclusion, our study demonstrated that exon 3 of mEH and
CYP1A1
T/C gene polymorphism are predisposing risk factors for susceptibility of sporadic PCa in northern India. It also suggests that a combination of smoking plays a significant role in modified PCa risk on the study population, which means that smokers carrying susceptible genotypes may be subjected to higher risk than those carrying nonsusceptible genotypes.
...
PMID:Cytochrome P4501A1 and microsomal epoxide hydrolase gene polymorphisms: gene-environment interaction and risk of prostate cancer. 1791 73
Beneficial health effects have recently been claimed for pomegranate juice. In vitro and in vivo studies have demonstrated its anti-atherosclerotic capacity, chemoprevention and chemotherapy of
prostate cancer
, and antiproliferative, apoptotic, and antioxidant activity, among others. On the other hand, there is a complex interplay between tumor initiation, promotion, and progression and xenobiotic biotranformation. This led us to investigate the effect of pomegranate juice consumption on cytochrome P450 (CYP) activity and expression. For this purpose, male mice consumed this fruit juice for 4 weeks, and pentobarbital-induced sleeping time and total hepatic CYP content, activity, and expression were evaluated. Moreover, the activity of CYP isoform 2E1 and expression of the main CYP isoforms, namely,
CYP1A1
/2, CYP2E1, and CYP3A, were also assessed. It was found that pomegranate juice consumption decreased total hepatic CYP content as well as the expression of CYP1A2 and CYP3A. Prevention of procarcinogen activation through CYP activity/expression inhibition may be involved in pomegranate juice's effect on tumor initiation, promotion, and progression.
...
PMID:Pomegranate juice effects on cytochrome P450S expression: in vivo studies. 1815 35
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