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An Immune-Inflammation Gene Expression Signature in Prostate Tumors of Smokers. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • Smokers have a higher rate of metastatic prostate cancer compared to nonsmokers, indicating that substances from tobacco may promote cancer progression.
  • Researchers found that tumors from current smokers displayed unique gene and protein changes related to immune response and inflammation, which were less pronounced or absent in tumors from past or never smokers.
  • Additionally, studies on nicotine effects showed that it heightened cancer cell invasiveness and sped up metastatic growth in mice, highlighting nicotine as a possible key factor in the development of aggressive prostate cancer in smokers.

Article Abstract

Smokers develop metastatic prostate cancer more frequently than nonsmokers, suggesting that a tobacco-derived factor is driving metastatic progression. To identify smoking-induced alterations in human prostate cancer, we analyzed gene and protein expression patterns in tumors collected from current, past, and never smokers. By this route, we elucidated a distinct pattern of molecular alterations characterized by an immune and inflammation signature in tumors from current smokers that were either attenuated or absent in past and never smokers. Specifically, this signature included elevated immunoglobulin expression by tumor-infiltrating B cells, NF-κB activation, and increased chemokine expression. In an alternate approach to characterize smoking-induced oncogenic alterations, we also explored the effects of nicotine in human prostate cancer cells and prostate cancer-prone TRAMP mice. These investigations showed that nicotine increased glutamine consumption and invasiveness of cancer cells in vitro and accelerated metastatic progression in tumor-bearing TRAMP mice. Overall, our findings suggest that nicotine is sufficient to induce a phenotype resembling the epidemiology of smoking-associated prostate cancer progression, illuminating a novel candidate driver underlying metastatic prostate cancer in current smokers.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4775384PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1158/0008-5472.CAN-14-3630DOI Listing

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