Expression of microRNAs and protein‐coding genes associated with perineural invasion in prostate cancer

Robyn L. Prueitt(National Institutes of Health), Ming Yi(Science Applications International Corporation (United States)), Robert Hudson(National Institutes of Health), Tiffany A. Wallace(National Institutes of Health), Tiffany M. Howe(National Institutes of Health), Harris G. Yfantis(Veterans Health Administration), Dong Hoon Lee(Veterans Health Administration), Robert M. Stephens(Science Applications International Corporation (United States)), Chang‐Gong Liu(The Ohio State University), George A. Calin(The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center), Carlo M. Croce(The Ohio State University), Stefan Ambs(National Institutes of Health)
The Prostate
May 5, 2008
Cited by 148Open Access
Full Text

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Perineural invasion (PNI) is the dominant pathway for local invasion in prostate cancer. To date, only few studies have investigated the molecular differences between prostate tumors with PNI and those without it. METHODS: To evaluate the involvement of both microRNAs and protein-coding genes in PNI, we determined their genome-wide expression with a custom microRNA microarray and Affymetrix GeneChips in 50 prostate adenocarcinomas with PNI and 7 without it. In situ hybridization (ISH) and immunohistochemistry was used to validate candidate genes. RESULTS: Unsupervised classification of the 57 adenocarcinomas revealed two clusters of tumors with distinct global microRNA expression. One cluster contained all non-PNI tumors and a subgroup of PNI tumors. Significance analysis of microarray data yielded a list of microRNAs associated with PNI. At a false discovery rate (FDR)<10%, 19 microRNAs were higher expressed in PNI tumors than in non-PNI tumors. The most differently expressed microRNA was miR-224. ISH showed that this microRNA is expressed by perineural cancer cells. The analysis of protein-coding genes identified 34 transcripts that were differently expressed by PNI status (FDR<10%). These transcripts were down-regulated in PNI tumors. Many of those encoded metallothioneins and proteins with mitochondrial localization and involvement in cell metabolism. Consistent with the microarray data, perineural cancer cells tended to have lower metallothionein expression by immunohistochemistry than nonperineural cancer cells. CONCLUSIONS: Although preliminary, our findings suggest that alterations in microRNA expression, mitochondrial function, and cell metabolism occur at the transition from a noninvasive prostate tumor to a tumor with PNI.


Related Papers

No related papers found

Powered by citation graph analysis