| Literature DB >> 28515055 |
Franklin W Huang1,2,3, Juan Miguel Mosquera4,5, Andrea Garofalo3, Coyin Oh3, Maria Baco3, Ali Amin-Mansour3, Bokang Rabasha6,3, Samira Bahl3, Stephanie A Mullane3, Brian D Robinson4,5, Saud Aldubayan6,3, Francesca Khani5, Beerinder Karir4,5, Eejung Kim6,3, Jeremy Chimene-Weiss3, Matan Hofree3, Alessandro Romanel7, Joseph R Osborne7,8, Jong Wook Kim6,3, Gissou Azabdaftari9, Anna Woloszynska-Read10, Karen Sfanos11,12, Angelo M De Marzo11,12,13, Francesca Demichelis4,7, Stacey Gabriel3, Eliezer M Van Allen6,2,3, Jill Mesirov3,14,15, Pablo Tamayo3,14,15, Mark A Rubin16,5,17, Isaac J Powell18,19, Levi A Garraway1,2,3.
Abstract
African-American men have the highest incidence of and mortality from prostate cancer. Whether a biological basis exists for this disparity remains unclear. Exome sequencing (n = 102) and targeted validation (n = 90) of localized primary hormone-naïve prostate cancer in African-American men identified several gene mutations not previously observed in this context, including recurrent loss-of-function mutations in ERF, an ETS transcriptional repressor, in 5% of cases. Analysis of existing prostate cancer cohorts revealed ERF deletions in 3% of primary prostate cancers and mutations or deletions in ERF in 3% to 5% of lethal castration-resistant prostate cancers. Knockdown of ERF confers increased anchorage-independent growth and generates a gene expression signature associated with oncogenic ETS activation and androgen signaling. Together, these results suggest that ERF is a prostate cancer tumor-suppressor gene. More generally, our findings support the application of systematic cancer genomic characterization in settings of broader ancestral diversity to enhance discovery and, eventually, therapeutic applications.Significance: Systematic genomic sequencing of prostate cancer in African-American men revealed new insights into prostate cancer, including the identification of ERF as a prostate cancer gene; somatic copy-number alteration differences; and uncommon PIK3CA and PTEN alterations. This study highlights the importance of inclusion of underrepresented minorities in cancer sequencing studies. Cancer Discov; 7(9); 973-83. ©2017 AACR.This article is highlighted in the In This Issue feature, p. 920. ©2017 American Association for Cancer Research.Entities:
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28515055 PMCID: PMC5836784 DOI: 10.1158/2159-8290.CD-16-0960
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cancer Discov ISSN: 2159-8274 Impact factor: 39.397