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The Thoc1 ribonucleoprotein and prostate cancer progression

  • Meenalakshmi Chinnam
  • , Yanqing Wang
  • , Xiaojing Zhang
  • , David L. Gold
  • , Thaer Khoury
  • , Alexander Yu Nikitin
  • , Barbara A. Foster
  • , Yanping Li
  • , Wiam Bshara
  • , Carl D. Morrison
  • , Rochelle D.Payne Ondracek
  • , James L. Mohler
  • , David W. Goodrich
  • Roswell Park Cancer Institute
  • MedImmune, Inc.
  • Cornell University
  • Virginia Commonwealth University

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

20 Scopus citations

Abstract

Background The majority of newly diagnosed prostate cancers will remain indolent, but distinguishing between aggressive and indolent disease is imprecise. This has led to the important clinical problem of overtreatment. THOC1 encodes a nuclear ribonucleoprotein whose expression is higher in some cancers than in normal tissue. The hypothesis that THOC1 may be a functionally relevant biomarker that can improve the identification of aggressive prostate cancer has not been tested. Methods THOC1 protein immunostaining was evaluated in a retrospective collection of more than 700 human prostate cancer specimens and the results associated with clinical variables and outcome. Thoc1 was conditionally deleted in an autochthonous mouse model (n = 22 or 23 per genotype) to test whether it is required for prostate cancer progression. All statistical tests were two-sided. Results THOC1 protein immunostaining increases with higher Gleason score and more advanced Tumor/Node/Metastasis stage. Time to biochemical recurrence is statistically significantly shorter for cancers with high THOC1 protein (log-rank P = .002, and it remains statistically significantly associated with biochemical recurrence after adjusting for Gleason score, clinical stage, and prostate-specific antigen levels (hazard ratio = 1.61, 95% confidence interval = 1.03 to 2.51, P = .04). Thoc1 deletion prevents prostate cancer progression in mice, but has little effect on normal tissue. Prostate cancer cells deprived of Thoc1 show gene expression defects that compromise cell growth. Conclusions Thoc1 is required to support the unique gene expression requirements of aggressive prostate cancer in mice. In humans, high THOC1 protein immunostaining associates with prostate cancer aggressiveness and recurrence. Thus, THOC1 protein is a functionally relevant molecular marker that may improve the identification of aggressive prostate cancers, potentially reducing overtreatment.

Original languageEnglish
Article numberdju306
JournalJournal of the National Cancer Institute
Volume106
Issue number11
DOIs
StatePublished - Nov 1 2014

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