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Stromal and epithelial transcriptional map of initiation progression and metastatic potential of human prostate cancer

Authors :
Tyekucheva, Svitlana
Bowden, Michaela
Bango, Clyde
Giunchi, Francesca
Huang, Ying
Zhou, Chensheng
Bondi, Arrigo
Lis, Rosina
Van Hemelrijck, Mieke
Andrén, Ove
Andersson, Sven-Olof
Watson, R. William
Pennington, Stephen
Finn, Stephen P.
Martin, Neil E.
Stampfer, Meir J.
Parmigiani, Giovanni
Penney, Kathryn L.
Fiorentino, Michelangelo
Mucci, Lorelei A.
Loda, Massimo
Tyekucheva, Svitlana
Bowden, Michaela
Bango, Clyde
Giunchi, Francesca
Huang, Ying
Zhou, Chensheng
Bondi, Arrigo
Lis, Rosina
Van Hemelrijck, Mieke
Andrén, Ove
Andersson, Sven-Olof
Watson, R. William
Pennington, Stephen
Finn, Stephen P.
Martin, Neil E.
Stampfer, Meir J.
Parmigiani, Giovanni
Penney, Kathryn L.
Fiorentino, Michelangelo
Mucci, Lorelei A.
Loda, Massimo
Publication Year :
2017

Abstract

While progression from normal prostatic epithelium to invasive cancer is driven by molecular alterations, tumor cells and cells in the cancer microenvironment are co-dependent and co-evolve. Few human studies to date have focused on stroma. Here, we performed gene expression profiling of laser capture microdissected normal non-neoplastic prostate epithelial tissue and compared it to non-transformed and neoplastic low-grade and high-grade prostate epithelial tissue from radical prostatectomies, each with its immediately surrounding stroma. Whereas benign epithelium in prostates with and without tumor were similar in gene expression space, stroma away from tumor was significantly different from that in prostates without cancer. A stromal gene signature reflecting bone remodeling and immune-related pathways was upregulated in high compared to low-Gleason grade cases. In validation data, the signature discriminated cases that developed metastasis from those that did not. These data suggest that the microenvironment may influence prostate cancer initiation, maintenance, and metastatic progression.Stromal cells contribute to tumor development but the mechanisms regulating this process are still unclear. Here the authors analyze gene expression profiles in the prostate and show that stromal gene signature changes ahead of the epithelial gene signature as prostate cancer initiates and progresses.<br />Funding Agencies:Challenge award from the Prostate Cancer FoundationProstate Cancer Foundation Irish Cancer Society Wellcome Trust-Health Research Board Dublin Centre for Clinical Research

Details

Database :
OAIster
Notes :
English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1233891137
Document Type :
Electronic Resource
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1038.s41467-017-00460-4