Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: UMLS:C0376358 (
prostate cancer
)
59,338
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Dermcidin is a candidate oncogene capable of increasing the number of cultured neuronal, breast cancer and
prostate cancer
cells and improving the survival of hepatic cells. The dermcidin gene encodes the proteolysis-inducing factor core peptide (PIF-CP) and the skin antimicrobial peptide DCD-1. The peptide responsible for inducing proliferation of cells and the mechanisms involved are unknown. In this study, we confirmed a proliferative effect of dermcidin overexpression of 20% (p<0.02) in the HuH7 human hepatic cell line. Proliferation was abrogated by prevention of PIF-CP translation or inactivation of its calcineurin-like phosphatase domain by site-directed mutagenesis. Prevention of DCD-1 translation had no effect. Treatment of cells with a 30 amino acid synthetic PIF-CP induced an analogous increase in proliferation of 14%. Microarray analysis of PIF-CP-treated cells revealed low but significant changes in 111 potential mediator genes. Pathway analysis revealed several gene networks involved in the cellular response to the peptide, one with VEGFB as a hub and two other networks converging on FOS and
MYC
. Quantitative PCR confirmed direct upregulation of VEGFB. These data reveal PIF-CP as the key mediator of dermcidin-induced proliferation and demonstrate induction of key oncogenic pathways.
...
PMID:Proteolysis-inducing factor core peptide mediates dermcidin-induced proliferation of hepatic cells through multiple signalling networks. 2164 25
Prostate cancer
, the majority of which is adenocarcinoma, is the most common epithelial cancer affecting a majority of elderly men in Western nations. Its manifestation, however, varies from clinically asymptomatic insidious neoplasms that progress slowly and do not threaten life to one that is highly aggressive with a propensity for metastatic spread and lethality if not treated in time. A number of somatic genetic and epigenetic alterations occur in
prostate cancer
cells. Some of these changes, such as loss of the tumor suppressors PTEN and p53, are linked to disease progression. Others, such as ETS gene fusions, appear to be linked more with early phases of the disease, such as invasion. Alterations in chromosome 8q24 in the region of
MYC
have also been linked to disease aggressiveness for many years. However, a number of recent studies in human tissues have indicated that
MYC
appears to be activated at the earliest phases of
prostate cancer
(e.g., in tumor-initiating cells) in prostatic intraepithelial neoplasia, a key precursor lesion to invasive prostatic adenocarcinoma. The initiation and early progression of
prostate cancer
can be recapitulated in genetically engineered mouse models, permitting a richer understanding of the cause and effects of loss of tumor suppressors and activation of
MYC
. The combination of studies using human tissues and mouse models paints an emerging molecular picture of
prostate cancer
development and early progression. This picture reveals that
MYC
contributes to disease initiation and progression by stimulating an embryonic stem cell-like signature characterized by an enrichment of genes involved in ribosome biogenesis and by repressing differentiation. These insights pave the way to potential novel therapeutic concepts based on
MYC
biology.
...
PMID:MYC and Prostate Cancer. 2177 61
Genetic mapping studies have identified multiple cancer susceptibility regions at chromosome 8q24, upstream of the
MYC
oncogene.
MYC
has been widely presumed as the regulated target gene, but definitive evidence functionally linking these cancer regions with
MYC
has been difficult to obtain. Here we examined candidate functional variants of a haplotype block at 8q24 encompassing the two independent risk alleles for prostate and breast cancer, rs620861 and rs13281615. We used the mapping of DNase I hypersensitive sites as a tool to prioritise regions for further functional analysis. This approach identified rs378854, which is in complete linkage disequilibrium (LD) with rs620861, as a novel functional
prostate cancer
-specific genetic variant. We demonstrate that the risk allele (G) of rs378854 reduces binding of the transcription factor YY1 in vitro. This factor is known to repress global transcription in
prostate cancer
and is a candidate tumour suppressor. Additional experiments showed that the YY1 binding site is occupied in vivo in
prostate cancer
, but not breast cancer cells, consistent with the observed cancer-specific effects of this single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP). Using chromatin conformation capture (3C) experiments, we found that the region surrounding rs378854 interacts with the
MYC
and PVT1 promoters. Moreover, expression of the PVT1 oncogene in normal prostate tissue increased with the presence of the risk allele of rs378854, while expression of
MYC
was not affected. In conclusion, we identified a new functional
prostate cancer
risk variant at the 8q24 locus, rs378854 allele G, that reduces binding of the YY1 protein and is associated with increased expression of PVT1 located 0.5 Mb downstream.
...
PMID:A functional variant at a prostate cancer predisposition locus at 8q24 is associated with PVT1 expression. 2181 16
Alterations in nucleoli, including increased numbers, increased size, altered architecture and increased function are hallmarks of
prostate cancer
cells. The mechanisms that result in increased nucleolar size, number and function in
prostate cancer
have not been fully elucidated. The nucleolus is formed around repeats of a transcriptional unit encoding a 45S ribosomal RNA (rRNA) precursor that is then processed to yield the mature 18S, 5.8S and 28S RNA species. Although it has been generally accepted that tumor cells overexpress rRNA species, this has not been examined in clinical
prostate cancer
. We find that indeed levels of the 45S rRNA, 28S, 18S and 5.8S are overexpressed in the majority of human primary
prostate cancer
specimens as compared with matched benign tissues. One mechanism that can alter nucleolar function and structure in cancer cells is hypomethylation of CpG dinucleotides of the upstream rDNA promoter region. However, this mechanism has not been examined in
prostate cancer
. To determine whether rRNA overexpression could be explained by hypomethylation of these CpG sites, we also evaluated the DNA methylation status of the rDNA promoter in
prostate cancer
cell lines and the clinical specimens. Bisulfite sequencing of genomic DNA revealed two roughly equal populations of loci in cell lines consisting of those that contained densely methylated deoxycytidine residues within CpGs and those that were largely unmethylated. All clinical specimens also contained two populations with no marked changes in methylation of this region in cancer as compared with normal. We recently reported that
MYC
can regulate rRNA levels in human
prostate cancer
; here we show that
MYC
mRNA levels are correlated with 45S, 18S and 5.8S rRNA levels. Further, as a surrogate for nucleolar size and number, we examined the expression of fibrillarin, which did not correlate with rRNA levels. We conclude that rRNA levels are increased in human
prostate cancer
, but that hypomethylation of the rDNA promoter does not explain this increase, nor does hypomethylation explain alterations in nucleolar number and structure in
prostate cancer
cells. Rather, rRNA levels and nucleolar size and number relate more closely to
MYC
overexpression.
...
PMID:Overexpression of ribosomal RNA in prostate cancer is common but not linked to rDNA promoter hypomethylation. 2182 2
PIM1 kinase and
MYC
are commonly co-expressed in human
prostate cancer
and synergize to induce rapidly progressing
prostate cancer
in mouse models. Deficiency of the Pim kinase genes is well tolerated in vivo, suggesting that PIM1 inhibition might offer an attractive therapeutic modality for
prostate cancer
, particularly for
MYC
-expressing tumors. Here we examine the molecular consequences of Pim1 and
MYC
overexpression in the prostate as well as the effects of depleting Pim1 in prostate carcinoma cells with high levels of
MYC
. Overexpression of Pim1 in the mouse prostate induces several pro-tumorigenic genetic programs including cell cycle genes and Myc-regulated genes before the induction of any discernible pathology. Pim1 depletion by RNA interference in mouse and human
prostate cancer
cells decreased cellular proliferation, survival, Erk signaling and tumorigenicity even when
MYC
levels were not significantly altered. These results indicate that PIM1 may be necessary to maintain tumorigenicity, and further support efforts aimed at developing PIM1 inhibitors for
prostate cancer
therapy.
...
PMID:Pim1 kinase is required to maintain tumorigenicity in MYC-expressing prostate cancer cells. 2186 Apr 23
EZH2 is part of the PRC2 polycomb repressive complex that is overexpressed in multiple cancer types and has been implicated in
prostate cancer
initiation and progression. Here, we identify EZH2 as a target of the
MYC
oncogene in
prostate cancer
and show that
MYC
coordinately regulates EZH2 through transcriptional and post-transcriptional means. Although prior studies in
prostate cancer
have revealed a number of possible mechanisms of EZH2 upregulation, these changes cannot account for the overexpression EZH2 in many primary prostate cancers, nor in most cases of high grade PIN. We report that upregulation of Myc in the mouse prostate results in overexpression of EZH2 mRNA and protein which coincides with reductions in miR-26a and miR-26b, known regulators of EZH2 in some non-prostate cell types, albeit not in others. Further, in human
prostate cancer
cells, Myc negatively regulates miR-26a and miR-26b via direct binding to their parental Pol II gene promoters, and forced overexpression of miR-26a and miR-26b in
prostate cancer
cells results in decreased EZH2 levels and suppressed proliferation. In human clinical samples, miR-26a and miR-26b are downregulated in most primary prostate cancers. As a separate mechanism of EZH2 mRNA upregulation, we find that Myc binds directly to and activates the transcription of the EZH2 promoter. These results link two major pathways in
prostate cancer
by providing two additional and complementary Myc-regulated mechanisms by which EZH2 upregulation occurs and is enforced during prostatic carcinogenesis. Further, the results implicate EZH2-driven mechanisms by which Myc may stimulate prostate tumor initiation and disease progression.
...
PMID:Myc enforces overexpression of EZH2 in early prostatic neoplasia via transcriptional and post-transcriptional mechanisms. 2194 Oct 25
The histone variant H2A.Z is present at many eukaryotic gene regulatory regions and can affect rates of transcription. Here we show that total H2A.Z and an acetylated form of H2A.Z is mainly present at the prostate specific antigen (PSA) enhancer and promoter in
prostate cancer
cell lines where the gene is expressed, but the levels decrease during rapid cycles of transcription. Treatment of
prostate cancer
cells with androgen results in increased H2A.Z levels due to upregulation of the H2A.Z-1, but not the H2A.Z-2 gene. This upregulation is likely the result of increased
MYC
transcription factor binding that occurs in response to androgen at the H2A.Z-1 promoter. Furthermore, we show that in a LNCaP xenograft model of
prostate cancer
progression, there is a significant increase of H2A.Z protein in castration resistant LNCaP tumors resulting from increased expression of the H2A.Z-1 gene. While a similar trend was observed in samples from
prostate cancer
patients, the results were not statistically significant. Nevertheless, there may be a subset of prostate cancers where elevated expression of H2A.Z-1 is indicative of
prostate cancer
progression to androgen independence.
...
PMID:Histone H2A.Z prepares the prostate specific antigen (PSA) gene for androgen receptor-mediated transcription and is upregulated in a model of prostate cancer progression. 2205 61
To characterize the pattern of ETS rearrangements and to uncover novel ETS fusion genes, we analyzed 200 prostate carcinomas (PCa) with TaqMan low-density arrays (TLDAs), followed by selective analyses with fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH), RT-PCR, and sequencing. Besides confirming the recurrent presence of ERG, ETV1, ETV4, and ETV5 rearrangements, we here report FLI1 as the fifth ETS transcription factor involved in fusion genes in
prostate cancer
. Outlier expression of the FLI1 gene was detected by TLDAs in one PCa that showed relative overexpression of FLI1 exons 4:5 as compared with FLI1 exons 2:3. A structural rearrangement was found using FISH probes flanking the FLI1 gene and RT-PCR and sequencing analyses showed fusion of SLC45A3 exon 1 with FLI1 exon 3. Interestingly, we found four cases with two different ETS rearrangements in the index tumor, thus revealing intratumor genetic heterogeneity. Correlation analysis with clinico-pathological data showed association of ERG rearrangements with locally advanced disease (pT3, P = 0.007) and
MYC
overexpression (P = 0.001), and association of ETV1 rearrangements with PTEN downregulation (P = 0.015). We report that FLI1 is a novel ETS transcription factor involved in gene fusions in
prostate cancer
and that intratumor genetic heterogeneity of ETS rearrangements can occasionally be found in index primary tumors.
...
PMID:FLI1 is a novel ETS transcription factor involved in gene fusions in prostate cancer. 2208 4
Colorectal cancer (CRC) is provoked by interactions between genetic and environmental factors. We herein review the incidence and the mechanisms of action of the reported single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) in the oncogenesis of CRC. More than 15 reports have studied the SNPs at 8q24, which are associated with the incidence of CRC as well as
prostate cancer
. We have also reported a SNP at the 10p14 locus, and the risks of other loci for CRC oncogenesis. With regard to the underlying mechanism for CRC, 8q24 is a locus of the long-enhancer site for
MYC
, which could determine the efficacy of
MYC
transcription. We suggest that 8q24 SNPs might be associated with the progression of CRC cases mediated by
MYC
expression. In this report, we summarize the published studies of the genetic background SNPs in the oncogenesis of CRC. The level of risk (most studies indicated less than a twofold increase) for CRC was lower than anticipated. Therefore, it is necessary to identify bona fide SNPs that precisely predict the risk for CRC. Alternatively, it is important to consider other factors, such as environmental or lifestyle-related factors, for the future prevention of CRC.
...
PMID:Review: Single nucleotide polymorphisms associated with the oncogenesis of colorectal cancer. 2212 32
Next-generation sequencing is making sequence-based molecular pathology and personalized oncology viable. We selected an individual initially diagnosed with conventional but aggressive prostate adenocarcinoma and sequenced the genome and transcriptome from primary and metastatic tissues collected prior to hormone therapy. The histology-pathology and copy number profiles were remarkably homogeneous, yet it was possible to propose the quadrant of the prostate tumour that likely seeded the metastatic diaspora. Despite a homogeneous cell type, our transcriptome analysis revealed signatures of both luminal and neuroendocrine cell types. Remarkably, the repertoire of expressed but apparently private gene fusions, including C15orf21:
MYC
, recapitulated this biology. We hypothesize that the amplification and over-expression of the stem cell gene MSI2 may have contributed to the stable hybrid cellular identity. This hybrid luminal-neuroendocrine tumour appears to represent a novel and highly aggressive case of
prostate cancer
with unique biological features and, conceivably, a propensity for rapid progression to castrate-resistance. Overall, this work highlights the importance of integrated analyses of genome, exome and transcriptome sequences for basic tumour biology, sequence-based molecular pathology and personalized oncology.
...
PMID:Integrated genome and transcriptome sequencing identifies a novel form of hybrid and aggressive prostate cancer. 2229 38
<< Previous
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
Next >>