Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0376358 (prostate cancer)
59,338 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Current knowledge of the etiology of prostate cancer is limited. Numerous studies have suggested that certain occupations and industries may be associated with the occurrence of prostate cancer. Information on occupation and industry on death certificates from 24 states gathered from 1984 to 1993 was used in case control study on prostate cancer. A total of 60,878 men with prostate cancer as underlying cause of death was selected and matched with controls who died of all other causes except cancer. Similar to the findings of our parallel large case control study of prostate cancer, we observed excess risks in some white-collar occupations, such as administrators, managers, teachers, engineers, and sales occupations. However, some blue-collar occupations, such as power plant operators and stationary engineers, brickmasons, machinery maintenance workers, airplane pilots, longshoreman, railroad industry workers, and other occupations with potential exposure to PAH also showed risk of excess prostate cancer. Risk was significantly decreased for blue-collar occupations, including farm workers, commercial fishermen, mechanics and repairers, structural metal workers, mining, printing, winding, dry cleaning, textile machine operators, cooks, bakers, and bartenders. Although we observed excess risks of prostate cancer among some low socioeconomic status (SES) occupations, the overall results suggest that the effects of higher SES cannot be ruled out in associations between occupational factors and the risk of prostate cancer.
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PMID:Risk for prostate cancer by occupation and industry: a 24-state death certificate study. 978 44

Although aromatic hydrocarbons have been extensively studied with regard to tumor formation, there has been little investigation into effects of these environmental chemicals on regulation of genes involved in tumor invasion. We investigated effects of three arylhydrocarbons on expression of MMP-9 in PC-3 and DU145 human prostate cancer cells. TCDD exposure lead to dose and time dependent increases in MMP-9 expression. Benzo(a)pyrene and a PAH-containing soot (BDS) also induced this MMP. These hydrocarbons also stimulated MMP-9 protein secretion. Our data demonstrate that aryl hydrocarbons can stimulate the production of MMP-9 in human prostate cancer cells.
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PMID:Aryl hydrocarbon exposure induces expression of MMP-9 in human prostate cancer cell lines. 1592 68

Polymorphisms in tobacco carcinogen metabolizing enzymes may generate interindividual variations towards the risk of developing prostate cancer. One of these enzymes is microsomal epoxide hydrolase (EPHX1) which metabolizes polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons, or PAH, carcinogens found in cigarette smoke. The activity of this enzyme is affected by two polymorphisms, a substitution of Tyr113 by His in exon 3 and a substitution of His139 by Arg in exon 4. The aim of this study was to use a population-based case-control study to investigate whether or not such genetic polymorphisms in EPHX1 gene can modify the relationship between smoking status and the risk of developing prostate cancer. We used restriction fragment length polymorphism, or PCR-RFLP to determine EPHX1 genotypes in subjects comprising 194 patients with histologically verified prostate cancer and 305 healthy individuals as control. We found no overall association between prostate cancer risk and functional polymorphisms of EPHX1 gene in exon 3 and exon 4. We further analysed the association between the EPHX1 genotypes and smoking. Smokers carrying the exon 3 Tyr/Tyr and Tyr/His genotypes were at no significant risk compared to non-smokers with the "rapid" Tyr/Tyr genotype. By contrast, a significant interaction of smoking and the exon 4 polymorphism was present.
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PMID:Microsomal epoxide hydrolase polymorphisms, cigarette smoking and prostate cancer risk in the Slovak population. 2210

Gene alterations are a major component of the landscape of tumor genomes. To assess the significance of these alterations in the development of prostate cancer, it is necessary to identify these alterations and analyze them from systems biology perspective. Here, we present a new method (EigFusion) for predicting outlier genes with potential gene rearrangement. EigFusion demonstrated excellent performance in identifying outlier genes with potential rearrangement by testing it to synthetic and real data to evaluate performance. EigFusion was able to identify previously unrecognized genes such as FABP5 and KCNH8 and confirmed their association with primary and metastatic prostate samples while confirmed the metastatic specificity for other genes such as PAH, TOP2A, and SPINK1. We performed protein network based approaches to analyze the network context of potential rearranged genes. Functional gene rearrangement Modules are constructed by integrating functional protein networks. Rearranged genes showed to be highly connected to well-known altered genes in cancer such as AR, RB1, MYC, and BRCA1. Finally, using clinical outcome data of prostate cancer patients, potential rearranged genes demonstrated significant association with prostate cancer specific death.
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PMID:Detecting cancer outlier genes with potential rearrangement using gene expression data and biological networks. 2281 6

Our previous work showed that a charge-reversal layer-by-layer nanosystem, PEI/PAH-Cit/AuNP-CS, effectively facilitates cellular uptake of siRNA and enhances the silencing efficacy of MDR1 siRNA. Here, the plasmid loading capacity of this vehicle was examined using EGFP-N1, and the plasmid release profile was determined in response to pH changes. The cytotoxicity of the EGFP-N1/PEI/PAH-Cit/AuNP-CS complex against HeLa and 293T cells was almost negligible. PEI/PAH-Cit/AuNP-CS efficaciously delivered the plasmids EGFP-N1 (encoding green fluorescent protein) and pGL3.0 (encoding luciferase) into 293T and HeLa cells, thus verifying the universality of PEI/PAH-Cit/AuNP-CS as a gene carrier. The results of an inverted fluorescence microscopy, flow cytometry (FCM) and western blotting methods demonstrated that PC-3 prostate cancer cells treated with EGFP-p53/PEI/PAH-Cit/AuNP-CS expressed higher levels of GFP than cells treated with EGFP-p53/PEI. Furthermore, PC-3 cells treated with EGFP-p53/PEI/PAH-Cit/AuNP-CS showed reduced cellular viability and increased nuclear fragmentation, consistent with elevated p53 expression. Propidium iodide (PI) flow cytometric assays were conducted to demonstrate that EGFP-p53/PEI/PAH-Cit/AuNP-CS elevated the level of apoptosis in PC-3 cells. Western blotting and caspase activation studies revealed that EGFP-p53/PEI/PAH-Cit/AuNP-CS complexes may induce PC-3 apoptosis via the mitochondria-mediated signaling pathway by up-regulation of Bax, down-regulation of Bcl-2, and activation of caspase-3.
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PMID:A universal gene carrier platform for treatment of human prostatic carcinoma by p53 transfection. 2441 35

Gold nanoparticles (Au NPs) are attractive for biomedical applications not only for their remarkable physical properties, but also for the ease of which their surface chemistry can be manipulated. Many applications involve functionalization of the Au NP surface in order to improve biocompatibility, attach targeting ligands or carry drugs. However, changes in cells exposed to Au NPs of different surface chemistries have been observed, and little is known about how Au NPs and their surface coatings may impact cellular gene expression. The gene expression of two model human cell lines, human dermal fibroblasts (HDF) and prostate cancer cells (PC3) was interrogated by microarray analysis of over 14,000 human genes. The cell lines were exposed to four differently functionalized Au NPs: citrate, poly(allylamine hydrochloride) (PAH), and lipid coatings combined with alkanethiols or PAH. Gene functional annotation categories and weighted gene correlation network analysis were used in order to connect gene expression changes to common cellular functions and to elucidate expression patterns between Au NP samples. Coated Au NPs affect genes implicated in proliferation, angiogenesis, and metabolism in HDF cells, and inflammation, angiogenesis, proliferation apoptosis regulation, survival and invasion in PC3 cells. Subtle changes in surface chemistry, such as the initial net charge, lability of the ligand, and underlying layers greatly influence the degree of expression change and the type of cellular pathway affected.
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PMID:Global transcriptomic analysis of model human cell lines exposed to surface-modified gold nanoparticles: the effect of surface chemistry. 2549 24

It is demonstrated that poly(allylamine hydrochloride)/poly(styrenesulfonate) (PAH/SPS) multilayer films can be successfully tailored for the capture and detection of small biomolecules in dilute concentrations. Based on in vitro results, these films could be potentially applied for rapid and high-throughput diagnosis of dilute biomarkers in serum or tissue. PAH presents functional amino groups that can be further reacted with desired chemistries in order to create customizable and specific surfaces for biomolecule capture. A variety of film assembly characteristics were tested (pH, molecular weight of PAH, and ionic strength) to tune the biotinylation and swelling behavior of these films to maximize detection capabilities. The resultant optimized biotinylated PAH/SPS 9.3/9.3 system was utilized in conjunction with quantum dots (Qdots) to capture and detect a dilute biomarker for prostate cancer, prostate-specific antigen (PSA). Compared to previous work, our system presents a good sensitivity for PSA detection within the clinically relevant range of 0.4-100 ng/mL.
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PMID:Optimization of amine-rich multilayer thin films for the capture and quantification of prostate-specific antigen. 2590 61

Dopamine is a neurotransmitter commonly used in clinical treatment. Polydopamine (PDA) has excellent histocompatibility and biosafety and can efficiently convert near-infrared reflection (NIR) to thermal energy. In this study, PDA was used as a promising carrier, and pH-responsive polymer-coated drug-loaded PDA nanoparticles (NPs; doxorubicin@ poly(allylamine)-citraconic anhydride [Dox@PAH-cit]/PDA NPs) were developed. As expected, the Dox@PAH-cit/PDA NPs exhibited excellent photothermal efficiency. In addition, at a low pH condition, the loaded Dox was released from the NPs due to the amide hydrolysis of PAH-cit. Upon NIR exposure (808 nm), the temperature of the NP solution rapidly increases to kill tumor cells. Compared with unbound chemotherapy drugs, the NPs have a stronger cell uptake ability. In vivo, the PDA NPs were able to efficiently accumulate at the tumor location. After intravenous administration and NIR exposure, tumor growth was significantly inhibited. In summary, the present investigation demonstrated that the Dox@PAH-cit/PDA NPs presented highly effective photothermal chemotherapy for prostate cancer.
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PMID:Highly effective photothermal chemotherapy with pH-responsive polymer-coated drug-loaded melanin-like nanoparticles. 2833 8