Oncotarget

Research Papers:

Differential expression of miR-34b and androgen receptor pathway regulate prostate cancer aggressiveness between African-Americans and Caucasians

Marisa Shiina, Yutaka Hashimoto, Taku Kato, Soichiro Yamamura, Yuichiro Tanaka, Shahana Majid, Sharanjot Saini, Shahryari Varahram, Priyanka Kulkarni, Pritha Dasgupta, Yozo Mitsui, Mitsuho Sumida, Laura Tabatabai, Guoren Deng, Deepak Kumar and Rajvir Dahiya _

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Oncotarget. 2017; 8:8356-8368. https://doi.org/10.18632/oncotarget.14198

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Abstract

Marisa Shiina1,*, Yutaka Hashimoto1,*, Taku Kato1, Soichiro Yamamura1, Yuichiro Tanaka1, Shahana Majid1, Sharanjot Saini1, Shahryari Varahram1, Priyanka Kulkarni1, Pritha Dasgupta1, Yozo Mitsui1, Mitsuho Sumida1, Laura Tabatabai1, Guoren Deng1, Deepak Kumar2, Rajvir Dahiya1

1Department of Urology, Veterans Affairs Medical Center, San Francisco and University of California San Francisco, San Francisco, California, USA

2Division of Science and Mathematic, Cancer Research Laboratory, University of the District of Columbia, Washington, DC, USA

*These authors have contributed equally to this work

Correspondence to:

Rajvir Dahiya, email: [email protected]

Keywords: miR-34b, prostate cancer, african-americans, caucasians, androgen receptor

Received: October 04, 2016     Accepted: November 23, 2016     Published: December 25, 2016

ABSTRACT

African-Americans are diagnosed with more aggressive prostate cancers and have worse survival than Caucasians, however a comprehensive understanding of this health disparity remains unclear. To clarify the mechanisms leading to this disparity, we analyzed the potential involvement of miR-34b expression in African-Americans and Caucasians. miR-34b functions as a tumor suppressor and has a multi-functional role, through regulation of cell proliferation, cell cycle and apoptosis. We found that miR-34b expression is lower in human prostate cancer tissues from African-Americans compared to Caucasians. DNA hypermethylation of the miR-34b-3p promoter region showed significantly higher methylation in prostate cancer compared to normal samples. We then sequenced the promoter region of miR-34b-3p and found a chromosomal deletion in miR-34b in African-American prostate cancer cell line (MDA-PCA-2b) and not in Caucasian cell line (DU-145). We found that AR and ETV1 genes are differentially expressed in MDA-PCa-2b and DU-145 cells after overexpression of miR-34b. Direct interaction of miR-34b with the 3’ untranslated region of AR and ETV1 was validated by luciferase reporter assay. We found that miR-34b downregulation in African-Americans is inversely correlated with high AR levels that lead to increased cell proliferation. Overexpression of miR-34b in cell lines showed higher inhibition of cell proliferation, apoptosis and G1 arrest in the African-American cells (MDA-PCa-2b) compared to Caucasian cell line (DU-145). Taken together, our results show that differential expression of miR-34b and AR are associated with prostate cancer aggressiveness in African-Americans.


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