| Literature DB >> 24213111 |
Mukesh Verma1, Payal Patel, Mudit Verma.
Abstract
Understanding the etiology of a disease such as prostate cancer may help in identifying populations at high risk, timely intervention of the disease, and proper treatment. Biomarkers, along with exposure history and clinical data, are useful tools to achieve these goals. Individual risk and population incidence of prostate cancer result from the intervention of genetic susceptibility and exposure. Biochemical, epigenetic, genetic, and imaging biomarkers are used to identify people at high risk for developing prostate cancer. In cancer epidemiology, epigenetic biomarkers offer advantages over other types of biomarkers because they are expressed against a person's genetic background and environmental exposure, and because abnormal events occur early in cancer development, which includes several epigenetic alterations in cancer cells. This article describes different biomarkers that have potential use in studying the epidemiology of prostate cancer. We also discuss the characteristics of an ideal biomarker for prostate cancer, and technologies utilized for biomarker assays. Among epigenetic biomarkers, most reports indicate GSTP1 hypermethylation as the diagnostic marker for prostate cancer; however, NKX2-5, CLSTN1, SPOCK2, SLC16A12, DPYS, and NSE1 also have been reported to be regulated by methylation mechanisms in prostate cancer. Current challenges in utilization of biomarkers in prostate cancer diagnosis and epidemiologic studies and potential solutions also are discussed.Entities:
Year: 2011 PMID: 24213111 PMCID: PMC3763396 DOI: 10.3390/cancers3043773
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cancers (Basel) ISSN: 2072-6694 Impact factor: 6.639
Figure 1.Major risk factors of prostate cancer and a broad classification of biomarkers of prostate cancer.
Figure 2.Characteristics of an ideal biomarker and factors influencing sensitivity and specificity of biomarkers.
Different kinds of biomarkers of prostate cancer.
| TMPRSS2-ERG gene fusion | Gene fusion due to translocation on chromosome 21 of oncogenes drives cell proliferation in prostate cancer (PCa) and tumor progression | [ |
| PCA3 | Gene encodes prostate-specific noncoding mRNA; antigen can enhance diagnosis of prostate cancer stage, grading, and aggressiveness when detected in urine | [ |
| GOLPH2 | GOLPH2 gene encodes a Golgi membrane antigen and is upregulated in 90% of cases, leading to overexpression of the antigen in prostate cancer | [ |
| PIM1 | Gene encodes a protein kinase; significant PIM1 expression can be found in advanced prostate cancer cases | [ |
| Hepsin | Gene encodes a type II integral membrane protease; upregulated in prostate cancer, leading to overexpression of the gene in tumors | [ |
| NKX3A | Encodes a transcription factor that functions in prostate epithelial development; losses in a region containing this gene may lead to prostate cancer development and progression | [ |
| PTEN | Loss of function (by allelic loss or mutation) at this tumor suppressor in advanced stages | [ |
| RB1 | Loss of function (by allelic loss or mutation) at this tumor suppressor in advanced stages | [ |
| TP53 | Loss of function (by allelic loss or mutation) at this tumor suppressor gene; found in advanced stages of prostate cancer | [ |
| PDLIM4 | Hypermethylation leads to reduced PDLIM4 mRNA and protein expression in prostate cancer cells and may be useful in detecting prostate cancer tumorigenesis | [ |
| GSTP-1(Gluthione S-transferase P1) | Hypermethylation leads to the loss of expression of GSTP-1, potentially leading to damaged DNA and greater likelihood for prostate cancer development | [ |
| CpG islands | Hypermethylation in these regions leads to disruption of the functioning of various genes involved in prostate cancer progression and development and can function in prostate cancer detection; present in multiple cancers | [ |
| Polycomb components (PcG proteins) | Chromatin modifications, varied composition, and overexpression of polycomb complexes may be indicative of prostate cancer progression | [ |
| RASSF1A, RARB2, APC, GSTP1 or GSTP1, APC, MDR1 | Combined hypermethylation assays for these genes can assist in discriminating between benign alterations and cancerous alterations in the prostate | [ |
| ASC/TMS1 (PYCARD) | Gene encodes an immune response regulator, hypermethylation of this gene is found in 40% of cases | [ |
| EPB41L3 | Gene encodes a cortical cytoskeleton protein, hypermethylation of this gene is found in 70% of prostate cancer cases | [ |
| RASSF1A | Hypermethylation in the promoter of this gene is indicative of benign regions in the prostate; a patchy pattern of hypermethylation of this gene promoter is indicative of carcinomas | [ |
| DLC1 | Methylation of this gene leads to gene repression and increases in prostates of older men; this gene is a biomarker for prostate cancer development in its early stages | [ |
| LINE-1 retrotransposons | Hypomethylation of these sequences occurs in metastatic cases indicating prostate cancer development; these retrotransposons are hypermethylated in normal conditions | [ |
| CDKN1C | Hypermethylation resulting in inactivation of gene in prostate cancer | [ |
| IGF2 | Loss of differential methylation pattern associated with loss of imprinting, which appears to set in the aging prostate before manifest carcinomas; IGF2 is a preneoplastic methylation change in aging prostate | [ |
| H3K4 | Increased dimethylation at lysine residue correlates with poor prognosis of prostate cancer | [ |
| H3K18 | Increased acetylation activation marker, correlates with poor prognosis | [ |
| JMJD3 | A demethylase that is overexpressed in metastic prostate cancer | [ |
| HDAC1 | A histone deacetylase that is found in prostate cancer, harbor TMPRSS2-ERG fusion | [ |
| TNFSR10D/DCR2 | Encode for preapoptotic receptors DR4 and DR5, mostly down-regulated in prostate cancer, subject to significant hypermethylation | [ |
| RNASEL | Hypomethylation results in inactivation; candidate for hereditary prostate cancer gene | [ |
| PSA (Prostate-specific antigen) | Antigen, Can be used in disease detection, identifying recurring disease after treatment, levels at diagnosis and more advanced stages | [ |
| PAP or AP (Human prostatic acid phosphatase) | Serum biomarker for prostate cancer, high levels of PAP activity in places (bone) where prostate cancer metastasized, high levels in serum, diagnosing metastatic carcinoma of prostate, also a biomarker for progression and reaction to androgen deprivation therapy | [ |
| AMACR | Enzyme involved in fat metabolism and is a growth promoter in prostate cancer, is highly specific biomarker used for diagnosis | [ |
| GRN-A/CGA (Chromogranin A) | Acidic protein in all neuroendocrine cells, diagnostic and prognostic values | [ |
| PSMA | Integral membrane protein with enzymatic properties, used in prostate cancer detection, levels increase in primary prostate cancer and metastatic disease | [ |
| PSCA (Prostate Stem Cell Antigen) | Membrane glycoprotein expressed in prostate, prostate cancer detection, indicates more advanced tumor stage with increased expression | [ |
| EPCA (Early Prostate Cancer Antigen) | Nuclear matrix protein, linked with nuclear transformations that occur in early prostate cancer, diagnostic | [ |
| B7-H3 | Immune molecule that participates in development of prostate cancer, helps predict recurrence and progression, may be used as diagnostic/prognostic marker, its expression associated with aggressive disease and short survival | [ |
| Sarcosine | Amino acid derivative of glycine, promotes prostate cancer cells toward invasion and aggressiveness, indicator of malignancy | [ |
| Caveolin-1 (Cav-1) | Integral membrane protein, overexpressed in prostate cancer cells and associated with progression, low levels related to high Gleason score, prognostic marker | [ |
| Ki-67 | Cell-proliferation associated marker, protein, can provide predictive and prognostic information | [ |
| HK2 | A serine protease with structural homology with PSA; marker of disease aggression | [ |
| Prostate specific membrane antigen | Embedded in cell membrane of epithelial cells of prostate; marker of metastasis | [ |
| DAB2IP (DAB2 interacting protein) | Ras GTPase-activating protein, tumor suppressor, functions in progression of prostate cancer, biomarker for diagnosis | [ |
| TRAIL (TNF-related apoptosis-inducing ligand) | Deals with apoptosis, loss of responsiveness to this is characteristic of progressive prostate cancer, TRAIL receptors encoded by 4 TNFRSF10 genes | [ |