Ontology highlight
ABSTRACT: Implications
Considering ETS fusions jointly may be useful for etiologic studies on prostate cancer, given that the transcriptome is profoundly impacted by ERG and non-ERG ETS fusions in a largely similar fashion, most notably genes regulating metabolic pathways.
SUBMITTER: Stopsack KH
PROVIDER: S-EPMC9812892 | biostudies-literature | 2023 Jan
REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature
Stopsack Konrad H KH Su Xiaofeng A XA Vaselkiv J Bailey JB Graff Rebecca E RE Ebot Ericka M EM Pettersson Andreas A Lis Rosina T RT Fiorentino Michelangelo M Loda Massimo M Penney Kathryn L KL Lotan Tamara L TL Mucci Lorelei A LA
Molecular cancer research : MCR 20230101 1
The most common somatic event in primary prostate cancer is a fusion between the androgen-related TMPRSS2 gene and the ERG oncogene. Tumors with these fusions, which occur early in carcinogenesis, have a distinctive etiology. A smaller subset of other tumors harbor fusions between TMPRSS2 and members of the ETS transcription factor family other than ERG. To assess the genomic similarity of tumors with non-ERG ETS fusions and those with fusions involving ERG, this study derived a transcriptomic s ...[more]