Lipid Alterations in African American Men with Prostate Cancer.
Anindita RavindranDanthasinghe Waduge Badrajee PiyarathnaJie GohlkeVasanta PutluriTanu SoniStacy LloydPatricia CastroSubramaniam PennathurJeffrey A JonesMichael IttmannNagireddy PutluriGeorge MichailidisThekkelnaycke M RajendiranArun SreekumarPublished in: Metabolites (2021)
African-American (AA) men are more than twice as likely to die of prostate cancer (PCa) than European American (EA) men. Previous in silico analysis revealed enrichment of altered lipid metabolic pathways in pan-cancer AA tumors. Here, we performed global unbiased lipidomics profiling on 48 matched localized PCa and benign adjacent tissues (30 AA, 24 ancestry-verified, and 18 EA, 8 ancestry verified) and quantified 429 lipids belonging to 14 lipid classes. Significant alterations in long chain polyunsaturated lipids were observed between PCa and benign adjacent tissues, low and high Gleason tumors, as well as associated with early biochemical recurrence, both in the entire cohort, and within AA patients. Alterations in cholesteryl esters, and phosphatidyl inositol classes of lipids delineated AA and EA PCa, while the levels of lipids belonging to triglycerides, phosphatidyl glycerol, phosphatidyl choline, phosphatidic acid, and cholesteryl esters distinguished AA and EA PCa patients with biochemical recurrence. These first-in-field results implicate lipid alterations as biological factors for prostate cancer disparities.
Keyphrases
- prostate cancer
- african american
- fatty acid
- radical prostatectomy
- gene expression
- end stage renal disease
- middle aged
- ejection fraction
- newly diagnosed
- chronic kidney disease
- single cell
- healthcare
- papillary thyroid
- prognostic factors
- molecular docking
- patient reported outcomes
- genome wide association study
- health insurance
- childhood cancer