Whole-exome sequencing of prostate cancer in sardinian identify recurrent UDP-glucuronosyltransferase amplifications

Tiansheng Zeng, Maria Antonietta Fedeli, Francesco Tanda, Yuyong Wang, Dongsheng Yang, Bei Xue, Lisha Jia, Giuseppe Palmieri, Leonardo A. Sechi, David J. Kelvin

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

5 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

Globally, prostate cancer is the third most common cancer in the world, and the second most common cancer in men. However, rates for incidence and mortality vary considerably with race, ethnicity, and geography. Over 97 significantly mutated genes that have been identified in prostate cancer; however, a lack of genomic prostate cancer studies focusing on different racial and ethnic groups and racial mixing pose a serious challenge to universalize these findings. The Sardinian population is an isolated Mediterranean population that has a high frequency of centenarians and a much lower incidence of prostate cancer than found in males in mainland Europe. Here, we conducted a genomic prostate cancer study on a Sardinian cohort diagnosed with local prostate cancer. Our data reveals a low rate of ERG fusion in Sardinian prostate cancer. Interestingly, we identified a novel BTBD7-SLC2A5 fusion that occurred in 13% of the patients. We also found that the UGT2B4 on 4q13.2 was amplified in 20% of the Sardinian patients but rarely amplified in patients of other population. These observations underscore the importance of the inter-population molecular heterogeneity of prostate cancer. In addition, we examined the expression of UGT2B4 in 497 prostate cancer patients derived from The Cancer Genome Atlas database. We found that high expression of UGT2B4 was associated with low-grade prostate cancer and upregulation of UGT2B4 in tumors was associated with upregulation of metabolism pathways such as ‘de novo’ IMP biosynthetic process, glutamine and monocarboxylic acid metabolism. These data provide insight into clinical relevance and functional mechanism of UGT2B4. Further understanding functional mechanism of UGT2B4 amplification and BTBD7-SLC2A5 fusion will aid in developing drugs to benefit the prostate cancer patients.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)438-450
Number of pages13
JournalJournal of Cancer
Volume12
Issue number2
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2020

Bibliographical note

Funding Information:
Funding support was provided by Li Ka-Shing Foundation (DJK) and International Institute of Infection and Immunity, Shantou University Medical College (DJK) and Dalhousie Medical Research Foundation (DJK); DJK is the recipient of the Tier I Canada Research Chair in Translational Vaccinology and Inflammation.

Publisher Copyright:
© The author(s).

ASJC Scopus Subject Areas

  • Oncology

PubMed: MeSH publication types

  • Journal Article

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