共 50 条
Recurrent deletion of CHD1 in prostate cancer with relevance to cell invasiveness
被引:0
|作者:
S Huang
Z G Gulzar
K Salari
J Lapointe
J D Brooks
J R Pollack
机构:
[1] Stanford University School of Medicine,Department of Pathology
[2] Stanford University,Department of Urology
[3] McGill University,Division of Urology, Department of Surgery
来源:
关键词:
prostate cancer;
genomic profiling;
tumor suppressor;
chromatin remodeling;
cell invasion;
D O I:
暂无
中图分类号:
学科分类号:
摘要:
Though prostate cancer is often indolent, it is nonetheless a leading cause of cancer death. Defining the underlying molecular genetic alterations may lead to new strategies for prevention or treatment. Towards this goal, we performed array-based comparative genomic hybridization (CGH) on 86 primary prostate tumors. Among the most frequent alterations not associated with a known cancer gene, we identified focal deletions within 5q21 in 15 out of 86 (17%) cases. By high-resolution tiling array CGH, the smallest common deletion targeted just one gene, the chromatin remodeler chromodomain helicase DNA-binding protein 1 (CHD1). Expression of CHD1 was significantly reduced in tumors with deletion (P=0.03), and compared with normal prostate (P=0.04). Exon sequencing analysis also uncovered nonsynonymous mutations in 1 out of 7 (14%) cell lines (LAPC4) and in 1 out of 24 (4%) prostate tumors surveyed. RNA interference-mediated knockdown of CHD1 in two nontumorigenic prostate epithelial cell lines, OPCN2 and RWPE-1, did not alter cell growth, but promoted cell invasiveness, and in OPCN2-enhanced cell clonogenicity. Taken together, our findings suggest that CHD1 deletion may underlie cell invasiveness in a subset of prostate cancers, and indicate a possible novel role of altered chromatin remodeling in prostate tumorigenesis.
引用
收藏
页码:4164 / 4170
页数:6
相关论文