| Literature DB >> 15735005 |
Goutham Narla1, Analisa Difeo, Helen L Reeves, Daniel J Schaid, Jennifer Hirshfeld, Eldad Hod, Amanda Katz, William B Isaacs, Scott Hebbring, Akira Komiya, Shannon K McDonnell, Kathleen E Wiley, Steven J Jacobsen, Sarah D Isaacs, Patrick C Walsh, S Lilly Zheng, Bao-Li Chang, Danielle M Friedrichsen, Janet L Stanford, Elaine A Ostrander, Arul M Chinnaiyan, Mark A Rubin, Jianfeng Xu, Stephen N Thibodeau, Scott L Friedman, John A Martignetti.
Abstract
Prostate cancer is a leading and increasingly prevalent cause of cancer death in men. Whereas family history of disease is one of the strongest prostate cancer risk factors and suggests a hereditary component, the predisposing genetic factors remain unknown. We first showed that KLF6 is a tumor suppressor somatically inactivated in prostate cancer and since then, its functional loss has been further established in prostate cancer cell lines and other human cancers. Wild-type KLF6, but not patient-derived mutants, suppresses cell growth through p53-independent transactivation of p21. Here we show that a germline KLF6 single nucleotide polymorphism, confirmed in a tri-institutional study of 3,411 men, is significantly associated with an increased relative risk of prostate cancer in men, regardless of family history of disease. This prostate cancer-associated allele generates a novel functional SRp40 DNA binding site and increases transcription of three alternatively spliced KLF6 isoforms. The KLF6 variant proteins KLF6-SV1 and KLF6-SV2 are mislocalized to the cytoplasm, antagonize wtKLF6 function, leading to decreased p21 expression and increased cell growth, and are up-regulated in tumor versus normal prostatic tissue. Thus, these results are the first to identify a novel mechanism of self-encoded tumor suppressor gene inactivation and link a relatively common single nucleotide polymorphism to both regulation of alternative splicing and an increased risk in a major human cancer.Entities:
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Year: 2005 PMID: 15735005 DOI: 10.1158/0008-5472.CAN-04-4249
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cancer Res ISSN: 0008-5472 Impact factor: 12.701