Study links normal stem cells to aggressive prostate cancer
Researchers identify potential new treatment options for therapy-resistant prostate cancer
MD Anderson News Release February 29, 2016
A study that revealed new findings about prostate cells may point to future strategies for treating aggressive and therapy-resistant forms of prostate cancer.
The study proved that the prostate basal cell layer contains adult stem cells which possess a unique gene expression profile resembling the deadliest form of prostate cancer. The research was led by Âé¶¹Ó³» MD Anderson Cancer Center with findings published in the Feb. 29 online issue of .
¡°It has become very controversial as to whether the human prostate contains adult stem cells or not and where they are located within the basal or luminal cell compartments,¡± said professor of Epigenetics and Molecular Carcinogenesis. ¡°Our study provided definitive evidence that the prostate basal cell layer harbors self-renewing adult stem cells that are enriched in stem-cell genes.¡±
Tang and his team headed by Dingxiao Zhang, Ph.D., an instructor in Tang¡¯s lab, show that the findings point to a ¡°theoretical rationale for combining Pol-I and MYC inhibitors to treat highly aggressive forms of prostate cancer which are resistant to endocrine therapy.¡± Pol-I is an enzyme involved with DNA replication and MYC is a regulator gene that plays a role in cell death and transformation.
The prostate gland contains basal and luminal cells, both of which have been identified as ¡°cells-of-origin¡± for prostate cancer in recent mouse studies. However, the question of whether and where stem cells were present in the human prostate has been largely a medical mystery and a constant debate until now.
Tang¡¯s team completed a genome-wide analysis of human benign prostate basal and luminal cells using RNA sequencing and found that they expressed genes differently and that some basal cells represented self-renewing adult stem cells.
¡°Strikingly, we found that basal stem cells also expressed a large cohort of ¡®proneural¡¯ genes that are normally involved in regulating the nervous system development,¡± said Tang. ¡°These proneural genes seem to play important functions in conferring stem cell-like properties upon some basal cells.¡±
This finding is important because a subset of prostate cancers (less than 5 percent) are highly aggressive and do not respond to current anti-prostate cancer treatments such as endocrine therapy.
¡°Surprisingly, these hard-to-treat cancers also express a gene signature that overlaps with our normal basal stem cell gene expression profile, suggesting that basal stem cells may represent the cell-of-origin for these prostate cancers,¡± said Tang. ¡°Of significance, the basal stem cell gene expression profile is also linked to endocrine therapy-resistant cancer which is lethal to virtually all advanced prostate cancer patients.¡±
Tang¡¯s team also found that basal stem cells are enriched in a genetic component that is partially regulated by MYC which offers hope that the deadliest of prostate cancers and therapy-resistant prostate cancers may have a new therapeutic option.
¡°Our studies establish that therapy that combines Pol-I and MYC inhibitors may be a potential new line of treatment for highly metastatic and endocrine therapy-resistant prostate cancer,¡± said Tang.
MD Anderson study team members included Yi Zhong, Ph.D., Yue Li, Ph.D., Kiera Rycaj, Ph.D., Shuai Gong, M.D., Ph.D., Xin Chen, Ph.D., Xin Liu, Ph.D., Hsueh-Ping Chao, Ph.D., Pamela Whitney, Tammy Calhoun-Davis, Yoko Takata, and Jianjun Shen, Ph.D., all of Epigenetics and Molecular Carcinogenesis.
Other participating institutions included Âé¶¹Ó³» at Austin, and Tongji University School of Medicine, Shanghai.
The study was funded by the National Institutes of Health (RO1-CA155693 and R01-CA95548), the Department of Defense (W81XWH-13-1-0352 and W81XWH-14-1-0575) and the Cancer Prevention and Research Institute of Texas (RP120194).