Literature DB >> 9815849

Androgen receptor variants with short glutamine or glycine repeats may identify unique subpopulations of men with prostate cancer.

J M Hakimi1, M P Schoenberg, R H Rondinelli, S Piantadosi, E R Barrack.   

Abstract

The androgen receptor (AR) contains glutamine (CAG) and glycine (GGC) repeats that are each polymorphic in length. We screened clinically localized prostate cancers for somatic mutations in the length of the CAG and GGC repeats in the AR gene and characterized the length of these repeats in the germ-line AR gene. Somatic mutations were rare, and the range of germ-line repeat lengths in men with prostate cancer was within the range of normal in the general population. Most allele frequencies in Caucasian men with clinical prostate cancer were remarkably comparable to those in the general Caucasian population. However, a subpopulation of the men with clinical prostate cancer had a substantially higher frequency of AR alleles with 16 or 17 CAGs (6 of 59 men, 10%) than did the general population (6 of 370 alleles, 1.6%), and a different subpopulation of the men with prostate cancer had a higher frequency of AR alleles with 12 or 13 GGCs (7 of 54 men, 13%) than did the general population (1 of 110 alleles, 0.9%). Of the men with prostate cancer who had an AR gene with 16 or 17 CAGs, 83% had lymph node-positive disease, despite the lack of clinical evidence of metastatic spread. This suggests that a short AR CAG allele may be a risk factor for the development of clinically unsuspected lymph node-positive prostate cancer among men undergoing radical prostatectomy and raises the question of whether this short repeat length played an active role in the development of aggressive prostate cancer. The odds of having a germ-line AR gene with a short CAG repeat (</=17 CAGs) were substantially higher in Caucasian men with lymph node-positive prostate cancer than in Caucasian men with lymph node-negative disease or in the general Caucasian population. The odds of having a short germ-line AR CAG were the same for men with lymph node-negative prostate cancer as for the general Caucasian population. The odds of having a germ-line AR gene with a short glycine repeat (</=14 GGCs) were substantially higher in men with prostate cancer than in the general population, but the frequency of alleles with a short GGC repeat was the same in men with lymph node-positive versus lymph node-negative disease. This suggests that a short GGC repeat may be a risk factor for the development of clinical prostate cancer, a hypothesis that needs to be tested in cohort and case-control studies.

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Year:  1997        PMID: 9815849

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Clin Cancer Res        ISSN: 1078-0432            Impact factor:   12.531


  31 in total

Review 1.  Racial differences in the androgen/androgen receptor pathway in prostate cancer.

Authors:  C A Pettaway
Journal:  J Natl Med Assoc       Date:  1999-12       Impact factor: 1.798

2.  Decision tree-based modeling of androgen pathway genes and prostate cancer risk.

Authors:  Jill S Barnholtz-Sloan; Xiaowei Guan; Charnita Zeigler-Johnson; Neal J Meropol; Timothy R Rebbeck
Journal:  Cancer Epidemiol Biomarkers Prev       Date:  2011-04-14       Impact factor: 4.254

3.  Modification of BRCA1-associated breast cancer risk by the polymorphic androgen-receptor CAG repeat.

Authors:  T R Rebbeck; P W Kantoff; K Krithivas; S Neuhausen; M A Blackwood; A K Godwin; M B Daly; S A Narod; J E Garber; H T Lynch; B L Weber; M Brown
Journal:  Am J Hum Genet       Date:  1999-05       Impact factor: 11.025

4.  GGN repeat length and GGN/CAG haplotype variations in the androgen receptor gene and prostate cancer risk in south Indian men.

Authors:  Krishnaswamy Vijayalakshmi; Kumarasamy Thangaraj; Singh Rajender; Venkatesan Vettriselvi; Perumal Venkatesan; Sunil Shroff; K N Vishwanathan; Solomon F D Paul
Journal:  J Hum Genet       Date:  2006-09-13       Impact factor: 3.172

5.  Prostate cancer: risk assessment and diagnostic approaches.

Authors:  L G Gomella; F Labrie; E J Gamito; M K Brawer
Journal:  Rev Urol       Date:  2001

6.  Small interfering RNAs based on huntingtin trinucleotide repeats are highly toxic to cancer cells.

Authors:  Andrea E Murmann; Quan Q Gao; William E Putzbach; Monal Patel; Elizabeth T Bartom; Calvin Y Law; Bryan Bridgeman; Siquan Chen; Kaylin M McMahon; C Shad Thaxton; Marcus E Peter
Journal:  EMBO Rep       Date:  2018-02-12       Impact factor: 8.807

7.  Prostatic intraepithelial neoplasia in mice expressing an androgen receptor transgene in prostate epithelium.

Authors:  M Stanbrough; I Leav; P W Kwan; G J Bubley; S P Balk
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  2001-09-04       Impact factor: 11.205

Review 8.  [Role of androgen receptors in hormone-refractory prostate cancer: molecular basics and experimental therapy approaches].

Authors:  L Rinnab; A Hessenauer; S V Schütz; E Schmid; R Küfer; F Finter; R E Hautmann; K D Spindler; M V Cronauer
Journal:  Urologe A       Date:  2008-03       Impact factor: 0.639

9.  Adrenal adenoma and normal androgen levels in a young woman with polycystic ovaries: a case of idiopathic hirsutism?

Authors:  F Orio; S Palomba; T Cascella; L Tauchmanovà; S Di Biase; D Labella; T Russo; M Pellicano; S Savastano; F Zullo; G Lombardi; A Colao
Journal:  J Endocrinol Invest       Date:  2004-01       Impact factor: 4.256

Review 10.  Linkage disequilibrium between the androgen receptor gene CAG and GGC repeats in the African-American population.

Authors:  Scott M Gilbert; Mitchell C Benson; James M McKiernan
Journal:  Curr Urol Rep       Date:  2002-06       Impact factor: 3.092

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