3.8 Article

Methionine-Homocysteine Pathway in African-American Prostate Cancer

Journal

JNCI CANCER SPECTRUM
Volume 3, Issue 2, Pages -

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/jncics/pkz019

Keywords

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Categories

Funding

  1. Agilent Technologies at BCM
  2. NIH [UO1CA179674-01, W81XWH-12-1-0046, W81XWH-11-1-0737, U01 CA167234]
  3. Prostate Cancer Foundation Challenge Award
  4. Brockman Medical Research Foundation [R01CA216426, ACS 127430-RSG-15-105-01-CNE]
  5. Dan L. Duncan Cancer Center [P30 CA125123]
  6. CPRIT Metabolomics Core Facility [RP170005]
  7. Intramural Research Program of the Center for Cancer Research [ZIA BC010499, ZIA BC 010624]
  8. National Institute of Health, Baylor College of Medicine Oncology scholars T32 fellowship [T32CA174647]

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African American (AA) men have a 60% higher incidence and two times greater risk of dying of prostate cancer (PCa) than European American men, yet there is limited insight into the molecular mechanisms driving this difference. To our knowledge, metabolic alterations, a cancer-associated hallmark, have not been reported in AA PCa, despite their importance in tumor biology. Therefore, we measured 190 metabolites across ancestry-verified AA PCa/benign adjacent tissue pairs (n = 33 each) and identified alterations in the methionine-homocysteine pathway utilizing two-sided statistical tests for all comparisons. Consistent with this finding, methionine and homocysteine were elevated in plasma from AA PCa patients using case-control (AA PCa vs AA control, methionine: P = .0007 and homocysteine: P < .0001), biopsy cohorts (AA biopsy positive vs AA biopsy negative, methionine: P = .0002 and homocysteine: P < .0001), and race assignments based on either self-report (AA PCa vs European American PCa, methionine: P = .001, homocysteine: P < .0001) or West African ancestry (upper tertile vs middle tertile, homocysteine: P < .0001; upper tertile vs low tertile, homocysteine: P = .002). These findings demonstrate reprogrammed metabolismin AA PCa patients and provide a potential biological basis for PCa disparities.

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