1. Constitutive mRNA expression of DNA repair-related genes as a biomarker for clinical radio-resistance: A pilot study in prostate cancer patients receiving radiotherapy
- Author
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Jörg Hümmerich, Odilia Popanda, Claudia Mayer, Silke Kropp, Gisela Werle-Schneider, Jenny Chang-Claude, Jürgen Debus, Helmut Bartsch, Peter Schmezer, and Oktay Celebi
- Subjects
Male ,Oncology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,DNA Repair ,DNA damage ,DNA repair ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Pilot Projects ,Biology ,Bioinformatics ,Radiation Tolerance ,Prostate cancer ,Internal medicine ,Biomarkers, Tumor ,medicine ,Humans ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,RNA, Messenger ,Gene ,Radiological and Ultrasound Technology ,Prostatic Neoplasms ,Cancer ,medicine.disease ,Neoplasm Proteins ,Reverse transcription polymerase chain reaction ,Radiation therapy ,Biomarker (medicine) - Abstract
Repair of radiation-induced DNA damage is believed to play a critical role in the development of adverse reactions in radiotherapy patients. Constitutive mRNA expression of repair genes was investigated in such patients to analyze whether expression patterns are predictive for therapy-related acute side effects.Prostate cancer patients (n = 406) receiving intensity-modulated radiotherapy were recruited in a prospective epidemiological study. Adverse effects were monitored during therapy using common toxicity criteria. For expression analyses, samples from 58 patients were selected according to their observed grade of clinical side effects to radiotherapy. Expression profiles were generated from peripheral blood lymphocytes using customized cDNA-arrays which carried probes for 143 DNA repair or repair-related genes. In addition, expression of selected genes was confirmed by quantitative real-time reverse transcription PCR (RT-PCR). Constitutive mRNA expression profiles were analyzed for predicting acute clinical radiosensitivity or radio-resistance.Cluster analysis identified 19 differentially expressed genes. Many of these genes are involved in DNA double strand break repair. Expression levels of these genes differed up to 7-fold from the mean of all patients whereas expression levels of housekeeping genes varied only up to 2-fold. High expression of the identified genes was associated with a lack of clinical radiation sensitivity thus indicating radio-resistance.Constitutive expression of DNA repair-related genes may affect the development of acute side effects in radiotherapy patients, and high expression levels of these genes seem to support protection from adverse reactions.
- Published
- 2006
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