A1 Refereed original research article in a scientific journal
Comparative analysis of 1152 African-American and European-American men with prostate cancer identifies distinct genomic and immunological differences
Authors: Rayford Walter, Beksac Alp Tuna, Alger Jordan, Alshalalfa Mohammed, Ahmed Mohsen, Khan Irtaza, Falagario Ugo G., Liu Yang, Davicioni Elai, Spratt Daniel E., Schaeffer Edward M., Feng Felix Y., Mahal Brandon, Nguyen Paul L., Den Robert B., Greenberger Mark D., Bradley Randy, Watson Justin M., Beamer Matthew, Stamatakis Lambros, Carmen Darrell J., Awasthi Shivanshu, Hwang Jonathan, Weil Rachel, Merisaari Harri, Mohamed Nihal, Deane Leslie A., Chakravarty Dimple, Yadav Kamlesh K., Yamoah Kosj, Nair Sujit S., Tewari Ashutosh K.
Publisher: NATURE RESEARCH
Publication year: 2021
Journal: Communications Biology
Journal name in source: COMMUNICATIONS BIOLOGY
Journal acronym: COMMUN BIOL
Article number: ARTN 670
Volume: 4
Issue: 1
Number of pages: 9
eISSN: 2399-3642
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/s42003-021-02140-y
Web address : https://www.nature.com/articles/s42003-021-02140-y
Self-archived copy’s web address: https://research.utu.fi/converis/portal/detail/Publication/66385463
Racial disparities in prostate cancer have not been well characterized on a genomic level. Here we show the results of a multi-institutional retrospective analysis of 1,152 patients (596 African-American men (AAM) and 556 European-American men (EAM)) who underwent radical prostatectomy. Comparative analyses between the race groups were conducted at the clinical, genomic, pathway, molecular subtype, and prognostic levels. The EAM group had increased ERG (P<0.001) and ETS (P=0.02) expression, decreased SPINK1 expression (P<0.001), and basal-like (P<0.001) molecular subtypes. After adjusting for confounders, the AAM group was associated with higher expression of CRYBB2, GSTM3, and inflammation genes (IL33, IFNG, CCL4, CD3, ICOSLG), and lower expression of mismatch repair genes (MSH2, MSH6) (p<0.001 for all). At the pathway level, the AAM group had higher expression of genes sets related to the immune response, apoptosis, hypoxia, and reactive oxygen species. EAM group was associated with higher levels of fatty acid metabolism, DNA repair, and WNT/beta-catenin signaling. Based on cell lines data, AAM were predicted to have higher potential response to DNA damage. In conclusion, biological characteristics of prostate tumor were substantially different in AAM when compared to EAM. Walter Rayford, Alp Tuna Beksac et al. investigated gene expression alterations in African-American and European-American men who underwent radical prostatectomy for prostate cancer. The observed differences include higher expression of inflammation genes and lower expression of mismatch repair genes in African-American men.
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