| Literature DB >> 26485759 |
Emmanuelle Nicolas1, Sanjeevani Arora2, Yan Zhou3, Ilya G Serebriiskii2,4, Mark D Andrake2, Elizabeth D Handorf3, Dale L Bodian5, Joseph G Vockley5, Roland L Dunbrack2, Eric A Ross3, Brian L Egleston3, Michael J Hall6, Erica A Golemis2, Veda N Giri7, Mary B Daly6.
Abstract
Risk assessment for prostate cancer is challenging due to its genetic heterogeneity. In this study, our goal was to develop an operational framework to select and evaluate gene variants that may contribute to familial prostate cancer risk. Drawing on orthogonal sources, we developed a candidate list of genes relevant to prostate cancer, then analyzed germline exomes from 12 case-only prostate cancer patients from high-risk families to identify patterns of protein-damaging gene variants. We described an average of 5 potentially disruptive variants in each individual and annotated them in the context of public databases representing human variation. Novel damaging variants were found in several genes of relevance to prostate cancer. Almost all patients had variants associated with defects in DNA damage response. Many also had variants linked to androgen signaling. Treatment of primary T-lymphocytes from these prostate cancer patients versus controls with DNA damaging agents showed elevated levels of the DNA double strand break (DSB) marker γH2AX (p < 0.05), supporting the idea of an underlying defect in DNA repair. This work suggests the value of focusing on underlying defects in DNA damage in familial prostate cancer risk assessment and demonstrates an operational framework for exome sequencing in case-only prostate cancer genetic evaluation.Entities:
Keywords: DNA damage response; case-only study; familial prostate cancer; genetic susceptibility to prostate cancer; whole exome sequencing
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26485759 PMCID: PMC4741850 DOI: 10.18632/oncotarget.5554
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Oncotarget ISSN: 1949-2553
Sources for building the candidate gene list
| Description | Source/Reference | Number of genes |
|---|---|---|
| DNA repair genes | Wood lab | 179 |
| AR-regulated DNA repair genes | (Polkinghorn, et al., 2013) | 144 |
| AR interactors | Human protein reference database | 149 |
| BRCA1 interactors | 102 | |
| Genes most frequently mutated in prostate tumors | (Barbieri, et al., 2012) | 19 |
| (Grasso, et al., 2012) | ||
| TARGET | (Van Allen, et al., 2014) | 130 |
| Genes linked to androgen and estrogen biosynthesis and metabolism | (Sun, et al., 2011) | 30 |
| Literature mining for genes involved in prostate cancer | MalaCard prostate cancer, (Rappaport, et al., 2014) | Top 50 |
| Diseases-Jensen lab-University of Copenhagen, (Pletscher-Frankild, et al., 2015) | Top 150 | |
| Candidate genes list for exome study of LNCaP cell line | (Spans, et al., 2012) | Top 50 |
| Genes linked to glycosylation disorders | (Freeze, et al., 2014) | 103 |
In addition to sources noted in the Results section, genes were added from online resources (MalaCards and DISEASES), which use literature mining to identify genes linked to inherited and somatic prostate cancer, a study by Spans et al, describing mutations distinguishing the widely studied LNCaP prostate cancer cell line from normal prostate cells (Spans, et al., 2012), and a group of genes linked to glycosylation disorders (Freeze, et al., 2014), given the growing evidence for defects in proteins involved in glycosylation in the pathogenesis of prostate cancer (Drake, et al., 2015).
Figure 2DNA damage response genes in prostate cancer patients
A. Radar plot indicating percent of genes that are AR-associated (blue), induced by androgens (red) or direct AR targets (green) in each class of DNA repair genes, based on [20]. Classes of DDR genes are based on the list posted at the Wood lab Web site (see Table 2), except that the two classes “Base excision repair (BER)” and “Other BER and strand break joining factors” were merged. Vertical black numbering indicates percent of AR-associated genes; blue numbering indicates number of genes in each class. B. Simplified representation of DNA interstrand crosslink damage being repaired by proteins in Fanconi's anemia pathway [101]. Variants found in patient 124604 are indicated in red font; those found in patient 117939, in blue font.C. Alternative binding by TP53BP1 or BRCA1 (shown in red font) specifies NHEJ versus HR DNA repair, with variants in each gene found in patient 129413.
Selected variants with scores of amino acid damage from 5 predictors and variant frequency in ExAC, by patient
| Patient ID | Variant DNA level | Gene | Consequence | Non-neutral scores | Representation in ExAC (European non-Finnish) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Allele count | Allele number | |||||
| 9:32989766 G/A | APTX | NP_001182178.1 p.R56X | 66736 | |||
| 17:41246481 T/C | BRCA1 | NP_009225.1 p.Q356R | 4 | 66734 | ||
| 4:178274801 T/G | NEIL3 | NP_060718.2 p.F460C | 3 | 66730 | ||
| 22:43933284 CCT/C | EFCAB6 | NP_073622.2 p.Q1340Rfs*43 | 66684 | |||
| 2:38301879 T/A | CYP1B1 | NP_000095.2 p.D218V | 5 | 41314 | ||
| 10:89503283 C/T | PAPSS2 | NP_004661.2 p.P454L | 5 | 66732 | ||
| 17:41246481 T/C | BRCA1 | NP_009225.1 p.Q356R | 4 | 66734 | ||
| 9:135779052 G/A | TSC1 | NP_000359.1 p.H732Y | 4 | 66706 | ||
| 1:156212872 T/A | BGLAP | NP_954642.1 p.C74X | 66696 | |||
| 2:58386928 G/GTAAT | FANCL | NP_060532.2 p.T367Nfs*13 | 65648 | |||
| 5:80109533 T/C | MSH3 | NP_002430.2 p.I929T | 5 | 66740 | ||
| 12:124209215 G > T | ATP6V0A2 | NP_036595.2 p.K103N | 5 | 66734 | ||
| 3:51673972 A/T | RAD54L2 | NP_055921.2 p.I730F | 4 | − | ||
| 21:16340242 T/C | NRIP1 | NP_003480.2 p.E91G | 4 | − | ||
| 2:149226489 C/T | MBD5 | NP_060798.2 p.A326V | 3 | − | ||
| 4:1206089 G/A | CTBP1 | NP_001319.1 p.421L | 4 | 14670 | ||
| 3:38888684 A/T | SCN11A | NP_054858.2 p.F1626Y | 3 | − | ||
| 1:63876815 A/G | ALG6 | Splice acceptor (−2) | − | − | ||
| 1:120056817 T/TGCA | HSD3B1 | NP_000853.1 p.V224_Y225insH | − | 66708 | ||
| 4:153332604 TCTC/T | FBXW7 | NP_361014.1 p.E117del | − | 66114 | ||
| 16:23634293 C/T | PALB2 | NP_078951.2 p.G998E | 5 | 66736 | ||
| 16:89815152 G/A | FANCA | NP_000126.2 p.S1088F | 4 | 65430 | ||
| 15:91326099 C/T | BLM | NP_000048.1 p.P868L | 4 | 66162 | ||
| 6:49700908 G/A | CRISP3 | NP_006052.1 p.A197V | 2 | 66362 | ||
| 18:3452067 G/A | TGIF1 | NP_733796.2 p.W30X | 66002 | |||
| 4:55955969 C/T | KDR | NP_002244.1 p.A1065T | 5 | 66726 | ||
| 17:12901781 A/C | ELAC2 | NP_060597.4 p.S490A | 5 | 66734 | ||
| 19:50766628 C/T | MYH14 | NP_001139281.1 p.A882V | 3 | 27644 | ||
| X:110973633 TGAA/T | ALG13 | NP_001093392.1 p.E795del | − | 41558 | ||
| 4:103747794 C/T | UBE2D3 | Splice acceptor (−1) | − | − | ||
| 9:35707745 G/C | TLN1 | NP_006280.3 p.L1539V | 4 | 66734 | ||
| 1:145578236 C/T | PIAS3 | NP_006090.2 p.R67W | 3 | 66740 | ||
| 10:5014483 T/A | AKR1C1 | NP_001344.2 p.S221N | 3 | 66712 | ||
| 10:5014484 C/A | AKR1C1 | 66712 | ||||
| 11:47237894 CAGA/C | DDB2 | NP_000098.1 p.R47del | − | − | ||
| 17:35564593 G/A | ACACA | NP_942134.1 p.R1182W | 5 | 66612 | ||
| 17:41246481 T/C | BRCA1 | NP_009225.1 p.Q356R | 4 | 66734 | ||
| 7:18633593 A/G | HDAC9 | NP_001191074.1 p.Y199C | 3 | 66702 | ||
| 14:50088465 T/G | MGAT2 | NP_002399.1 p.I160S | 5 | 66402 | ||
| 17:41246481 T/C | BRCA1 | NP_009225.1 p.Q356R | 4 | 66734 | ||
| 15:43762077 TGGGATA/T | TP53BP1 | NP_001135451.1 p.I455_P456del | − | − | ||
| 2:38298287 T/TGGTGGCATCA | CYP1B1 | NP_000095.2 p.T404Sfs*30 | ||||
| 10:94297192 C/T | IDE | NP_004960.2 p.G72S | 5 | 66724 | ||
| 12:124824917 C/T | NCOR2 | NP_001070729.2 p.R1794Q | 3 | 65378 | ||
| 21:16337279 C/A | NRIP1 | NP_003480.2 p.V1079F | 3 | 66670 | ||
| 16:23632788 TTTTC/T | PALB2 | NP_078951.2 p.E1002Tfs*4 | − | |||
| 6:52657698 C/T | GSTA1 | NP_665683.1 p.E168K | 4 | 66738 | ||
| 8:48973252 G/A | UBE2V2 | NP_003341.1 p.R101Q | 4 | 65850 | ||
| 20:31021718 C/T | ASXL1 | NP_056153.2 p.R573W | 4 | 63434 | ||
| 12:53776449 G/C | SP1 | NP_612482.2 p.G240R | 3 | 66738 | ||
| 11:62388048 G/C | B3GAT3 | NP_036332.2 p.R60G | 3 | 60290 | ||
| 9:131709581 A/AT | DOLK | NP_055723.1 p.M1? | 63350 | |||
| 13:28592620 T/C | FLT3 | NP_004110.2.Y842C | 5 | 66710 | ||
| 10:94274700 A/G | IDE | NP_004960.2 p.M254T | 5 | 66698 | ||
| 4:70723282 C/G | SULT1E1 | NP_005411.1 p.W27C | 4 | − | ||
| 1:120478125 A/C | NOTCH2 | NP_001186930.1 p.F1209V | 4 | 66726 | ||
| 17:33430313 T/C | RAD51D | NP_001136043.1 p.E223G | 4 | 51128 | ||
| 1:182555767 C/T | RNASEL | NP_066956.1 p.G59S | 4 | 66514 | ||
Nicolas et al., Table 3
score given to variant creating stop gain or frameshift;
variant causing missense and located in splice site;
this variant has been described in patients with congenital glaucoma, an autosomal recessive trait usually recognized during the first year of life (Sena, et al., 2004). The mutation is not listed in ExAC as it excludes mutations associated with severe pediatric diseases. In the representation in the ExAC column, (−) denotes that the variant was not found in the database while (0) denotes that the variant was absent in European non-Finnish but detected in other ethnicities, as listed in Supp Table 4. This Table also lists damaging variants in genes shown to be clearly tumor-promoting in some inherited or somatic forms of other cancers, although not currently well validated for prostate, including FLT3, ASXL1, KDR, NOTCH2 (e.g. (Kindler, et al., 2005; Sallmyr, et al., 2008; Antonescu, et al., 2009)); as well as genes which are identified by the candidate criteria noted in Table 2, but for which limited information is available based on functional characterization to date (e.g., the AR-interacting protein IDE interacts directly with AR (Kupfer, et al., 1994)).
Figure 3Functional defects associated with novel missense variants
A. AKR1C1, S221N. AKR1C1 catalyzes the inactivation of progesterone to the less potent 20α-hydroxyl-pregn-4-ene-3-one. The reaction is NADPH dependent with an obligatory requirement for the cofactor to bind before the steroid substrate can bind to form the central complex. The progesterone is maintained in a steroid binding site at H222; an H222I mutation decreases the Km value for NADPH 95-fold [102]. Here, AKR1C1 (PDB code: 1MRQ) is shown with bound steroid 20alpha-hydroxy-progesterone, and the cofactor, NADP+ in ball-and-stick representation with cyan carbons, and orange phosphorus atoms. S221 and adjacent catalytic residue H222 of AKR1C1 are shown with magenta sticks. S221 is involved in 2 hydrogen bonds (shown with cyan thin lines) with adjacent residues and one with the NADP+ cofactor. Though predicted to be benign by several conservation based servers, the S221N substitution disrupts the hydrogen-bonding network required to maintain the catalytic active site configuration. B. Shown are the PAPSS2 kinase domain in green, PUA (PseudoUridine synthase and Archaeosine transglycosylase) domain in gray and sulfate adenylyltransferase domain in blue. The position of the P454L and G270D missense variants are indicated.
Figure 4Elevated γH2AX in T-cells from patients with prostate cancer following treatment with DNA damaging agents
Primary T-cells from 9 patients and 10 age- and sex-matched controls were stimulated by PHA and IL-2, then treated with vehicle, aphidicolin or etoposide, and stained for nuclear γH2AX foci. A. Mean number of γH2AX foci in vehicle treated patients and matched controls (p = 0.746, not significant). B. Mean number γH2AX foci per cell are depicted for cases and controls following drug treatment. Cases: red ‘x's, controls: blue triangles. Dashed lines: statistically optimal cutoff points to discriminate between samples with high and low γH2AX levels for each treatment or the two tests combined, as indicated. Using the combination (solid black line), 7/9 patients exhibited high γH2AX levels versus 1/10 controls. C. Area under the receiver operating characteristic (ROC) curve (AUC) for the combined γH2AX scores for aphidicolin and etoposide demonstrates assays discriminate between patients and controls, AUC = 0.8778.
Figure 1Project Flow Chart
After review of family history and negative results for genetic testing for known predisposing factors, 12 DNA samples isolated from peripheral blood lymphocytes (PBLs) of 12 patients with prostate cancer were sent to Ambry Genetics for exome sequencing. Data analysis included identification of the rare variants in 826 genes selected as described in Table 2 and validation by Sanger sequencing of the variants that scored non neutral by at least 3 in silico predictors. Two variants (in AKR1C1 and PAPSS2) were further characterized by molecular modeling. PBLs were also used to assess the response to DNA damaging agents.
Family history and prostate cancer characteristics of analyzed prostate cancer patients
| Patient ID | Age at diagnosis | Stage/Gleason | 1st degree relatives with cancer Type of cancer/age | 2nd degree relatives with cancer Type of cancer/age |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 68 | T2aN0MX/3+4=7 | sister-ovary 27 and colon 66 | ||
| 68 | T3bN0MX/4+3=7 | mother-stomach 80, colon 95 | nephew-non Hodgkin's 20′s | |
| 65 | T2cNOMX/3+3=6 | father-prostate 65 | paternal uncle-throat 60 | |
| 59 | T2cNXMX/6 | mother-colon mid 40′s | ||
| 44 | T2cN0MX/3+3=6 | father-melanoma 72, polyps | paternal uncle-colon 50 | |
| 65 | T2cNOMX/3+3=6 | sister-basal cell 60 | paternal aunt-breast | |
| 54 | T2cN0MX/3+3=6 | sister-uterine 54 | paternal cousin-breast 36 | |
| 59 | T3aN0MX/3+4=7 and 4+3=7 and 6 (multiple areas) | maternal aunt-unknown cancer 89 | ||
| 57 | T1c/3+4=7 | father-prostate 70, kidney 80, liver 80 | paternal grandfather-prostate 85 | |
| 62 | T2cN0MX/3+4=7 | sister-ovary 57, cervix 57 | paternal cousin-inflammatory breast 45 | |
| 41 | T3bN1M0/4+4=8 | father-prostate 67 | paternal grandfather-polyps | |
| 52 | T2cNO/3+4=7 | mother-breast 68, melanoma 65 | maternal aunt-colon 45 |