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NF-?B gene signature predicts prostate cancer progression.


ABSTRACT: In many patients with prostate cancer, the cancer will be recurrent and eventually progress to lethal metastatic disease after primary treatment, such as surgery or radiation therapy. Therefore, it would be beneficial to better predict which patients with early-stage prostate cancer would progress or recur after primary definitive treatment. In addition, many studies indicate that activation of NF-?B signaling correlates with prostate cancer progression; however, the precise underlying mechanism is not fully understood. Our studies show that activation of NF-?B signaling via deletion of one allele of its inhibitor, I?B?, did not induce prostatic tumorigenesis in our mouse model. However, activation of NF-?B signaling did increase the rate of tumor progression in the Hi-Myc mouse prostate cancer model when compared with Hi-Myc alone. Using the nonmalignant NF-?B-activated androgen-depleted mouse prostate, a NF-?B-activated recurrence predictor 21 (NARP21) gene signature was generated. The NARP21 signature successfully predicted disease-specific survival and distant metastases-free survival in patients with prostate cancer. This transgenic mouse model-derived gene signature provides a useful and unique molecular profile for human prostate cancer prognosis, which could be used on a prostatic biopsy to predict indolent versus aggressive behavior of the cancer after surgery.

SUBMITTER: Jin R 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC4024337 | biostudies-literature | 2014 May

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

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NF-κB gene signature predicts prostate cancer progression.

Jin Renjie R   Yi Yajun Y   Yull Fiona E FE   Blackwell Timothy S TS   Clark Peter E PE   Koyama Tatsuki T   Smith Joseph A JA   Matusik Robert J RJ  

Cancer research 20140331 10


In many patients with prostate cancer, the cancer will be recurrent and eventually progress to lethal metastatic disease after primary treatment, such as surgery or radiation therapy. Therefore, it would be beneficial to better predict which patients with early-stage prostate cancer would progress or recur after primary definitive treatment. In addition, many studies indicate that activation of NF-κB signaling correlates with prostate cancer progression; however, the precise underlying mechanism  ...[more]

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2021-12-19 | PXD028335 | Pride