Genetic analysis reveals a significant contribution of ces1 to prostate cancer progression in taiwanese men
Journal
Cancers
Journal Volume
12
Journal Issue
5
Pages
1346
Date Issued
2020
Author(s)
Abstract
The genes that influence prostate cancer progression remain largely unknown. Since the carboxylesterase gene family plays a crucial role in xenobiotic metabolism and lipid/cholesterol homeostasis, we hypothesize that genetic variants in carboxylesterase genes may influence clinical outcomes for prostate cancer patients. A total of 478 (36 genotyped and 442 imputed) single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) in five genes of the carboxylesterase family were assessed in terms of their associations with biochemical recurrence (BCR)-free survival in 643 Taiwanese patients with prostate cancer who underwent radical prostatectomy. The strongest association signal was shown in CES1 (P = 9.64×10-4 for genotyped SNP rs8192935 and P = 8.96 × 10-5 for imputed SNP rs8192950). After multiple test correction and adjustment for clinical covariates, CES1 rs8192935 (P = 9.67 × 10-4) and rs8192950 (P = 9.34 × 10-5) remained significant. These SNPs were correlated with CES1 expression levels, which in turn were associated with prostate cancer aggressiveness. Furthermore, our meta-analysis, including eight studies, indicated that a high CES1 expression predicted better outcomes among prostate cancer patients (hazard ratio 0.82, 95% confidence interval 0.70–0.97, P = 0.02). In conclusion, our findings suggest that CES1 rs8192935 and rs8192950 are associated with BCR and that CES1 plays a tumor suppressive role in prostate cancer. ? 2020 by the authors.
Subjects
Biomarker; Carboxylesterase; Prognosis; Progression; Prostate cancer
SDGs
Other Subjects
carboxylesterase; carboxylesterase 1; unclassified drug; aged; Article; biochemical recurrence free survival; bioinformatics; cancer growth; cancer recurrence; cancer staging; cancer survival; CES1 gene; clinical feature; clinical outcome; controlled study; gene; gene expression; gene function; genetic analysis; genetic association; genetic variability; genotype; human; human tissue; major clinical study; male; prostate cancer; prostatectomy; single nucleotide polymorphism; Taiwanese
Publisher
MDPI AG
Type
journal article