- Aggressive prostate tumors found to retain genetic materials known as introns
- Key discoveries could help identify biomarkers of aggressive tumors
- Findings could lead to personalized treatment for prostate cancer
The team set out to learn how prostate cancer cells differ from normal, healthy prostate cells, in particular how those cancerous cells transcribe their genes. The researchers focused on alternative splicing, the process by which a DNA sequence is transcribed into RNA forms in an abnormal manner compared to healthy cells, resulting in tumors.
“Cancer cells are obviously bad cells, but they may also have abnormal, what we would call ‘deregulated’ molecular and biological properties that may make them vulnerable. We wanted to explore whether those vulnerabilities could be identified and exploited,” says Dr. Tang, Chair of Pharmacology and Therapeutics at the cancer center and senior author on the new publication.
The team made several important discoveries, each with important translational and clinical implications. First, they found that as prostate cancer progresses and becomes more aggressive, gene splicing also becomes more unregulated, meaning the RNA splicing pattern is increasingly abnormal. Secondly, very aggressive cancer cells are more likely to splice RNA in abnormal fashion. Third, they found that these aggressive prostate cancer types are more frequently enriched by retaining introns, segments of genetic code that do not become proteins. These observations are consistent with emerging data in other cancer types.
“We found, surprisingly, that when prostate cancer cells become more aggressive, they have more genes that retain the introns in their messenger RNA, or mRNA,” notes Dr. Liu, Vice Chair of Roswell Park’s Department of Biostatistics and Bioinformatics. “We have observed this retention and also noted that retention of introns is more pronounced in advanced tumors.”
Currently, clinicians do not have reliable methods for determining whether a prostate tumor is indolent, not requiring immediate treatment, or is dangerously aggressive. The abnormal alternative RNA splicing patterns in aggressive prostate cancer suggest that these splicing processes could be developed into biomarkers that could be used to distinguish tumors that develop slowly from those that will be more aggressive.
The findings also reveal that aggressive prostate cancers might be more susceptible than indolent tumors to chemical inhibitors of the splicing machinery and that intron retention can be exploited for development of immunotherapies for treatment-resistant and aggressive tumors. The team plans further projects to pursue these implications.
This project was supported, in part, by grants from the National Cancer Institute, or NCI (project nos. R01CA237027, R01CA240290, R21CA237939, R21CA218635, U24CA232979 and P30CA016056, Roswell Park’s core grant) and Department of Defense (award nos. W81XWH-14-1-0575 and W81XWH-16-1-0575).
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This release is also available on the Roswell Park website: https://www.roswellpark.org/newsroom/202004-aggressive-prostate-cancer-marked-abnormal-rna-splicing-study-reveals
Roswell Park Comprehensive Cancer Center is a community united by the drive to eliminate cancer’s grip on humanity by unlocking its secrets through personalized approaches and unleashing the healing power of hope. Founded by Dr. Roswell Park in 1898, it is the only National Cancer Institute-designated comprehensive cancer center in Upstate New York. Learn more at www.roswellpark.org, or contact us at 1-800-ROSWELL (1-800-767-9355) or [email protected].
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