2 research outputs found
Metabolomic Profiling Identifies Biochemical Pathways Associated with Castration-Resistant Prostate Cancer
Despite
recent developments in treatment strategies, castration-resistant
prostate cancer (CRPC) is still the second leading cause of cancer-associated
mortality among American men, the biological underpinnings of which
are not well understood. To this end, we measured levels of 150 metabolites
and examined the rate of utilization of 184 metabolites in metastatic
androgen-dependent prostate cancer (AD) and CRPC cell lines using
a combination of targeted mass spectrometry and metabolic phenotyping.
Metabolic data were used to derive biochemical pathways that were
enriched in CRPC, using Oncomine concept maps (OCM). The enriched
pathways were then examined in-silico for their association with treatment
failure (i.e., prostate specific antigen (PSA) recurrence or biochemical
recurrence) using published clinically annotated gene expression data
sets. Our results indicate that a total of 19 metabolites were altered
in CRPC compared to AD cell lines. These altered metabolites mapped
to a highly interconnected network of biochemical pathways that describe
UDP glucuronosyltransferase (UGT) activity. We observed an association
with time to treatment failure in an analysis employing genes restricted
to this pathway in three independent gene expression data sets. In
summary, our studies highlight the value of employing metabolomic
strategies in cell lines to derive potentially clinically useful predictive
tools
Metabolomic Profiling Identifies Biochemical Pathways Associated with Castration-Resistant Prostate Cancer
Despite
recent developments in treatment strategies, castration-resistant
prostate cancer (CRPC) is still the second leading cause of cancer-associated
mortality among American men, the biological underpinnings of which
are not well understood. To this end, we measured levels of 150 metabolites
and examined the rate of utilization of 184 metabolites in metastatic
androgen-dependent prostate cancer (AD) and CRPC cell lines using
a combination of targeted mass spectrometry and metabolic phenotyping.
Metabolic data were used to derive biochemical pathways that were
enriched in CRPC, using Oncomine concept maps (OCM). The enriched
pathways were then examined in-silico for their association with treatment
failure (i.e., prostate specific antigen (PSA) recurrence or biochemical
recurrence) using published clinically annotated gene expression data
sets. Our results indicate that a total of 19 metabolites were altered
in CRPC compared to AD cell lines. These altered metabolites mapped
to a highly interconnected network of biochemical pathways that describe
UDP glucuronosyltransferase (UGT) activity. We observed an association
with time to treatment failure in an analysis employing genes restricted
to this pathway in three independent gene expression data sets. In
summary, our studies highlight the value of employing metabolomic
strategies in cell lines to derive potentially clinically useful predictive
tools