Overexpression of C-MYC oncogene in prostate cancer predicts biochemical recurrence

D Hawksworth, L Ravindranath, Y Chen… - Prostate cancer and …, 2010 - nature.com
D Hawksworth, L Ravindranath, Y Chen, B Furusato, IA Sesterhenn, DG McLeod…
Prostate cancer and prostatic diseases, 2010nature.com
Alterations of chromosome 8, including amplification at 8q24 harboring the C-MYC
oncogene, have been noted as one of the most common chromosomal abnormalities in
prostate cancer (CaP) progression. However, the frequency of C-MYC alterations in CaP
has remained uncertain. A recent study, using a new anti-MYC antibody, described
prevalent upregulation of nuclear C-MYC protein expression as an early oncogenic
alteration in CaP. Further, we have recently reported regulation of C-MYC expression by …
Abstract
Alterations of chromosome 8, including amplification at 8q24 harboring the C-MYC oncogene, have been noted as one of the most common chromosomal abnormalities in prostate cancer (CaP) progression. However, the frequency of C-MYC alterations in CaP has remained uncertain. A recent study, using a new anti-MYC antibody, described prevalent upregulation of nuclear C-MYC protein expression as an early oncogenic alteration in CaP. Further, we have recently reported regulation of C-MYC expression by ERG and a significant correlation between C-MYC overexpression and TMPRSS2–ERG fusion in early stage CaP. These emerging data suggest that increased C-MYC expression may be a critical and early oncogenic event driving CaP progression. In this study, we assessed whether C-MYC mRNA overexpression in primary prostate tumors was predictive of more aggressive tumor or disease progression. Our approach was to quantitatively determine C-MYC mRNA expression levels in laser capture micro-dissected tumor cells and matched benign epithelial cells in a radical prostatectomy cohort with long follow-up data available. On the basis of our results, we conclude that elevated C-MYC expression in primary prostate tumor is biologically relevant and may be a predictor of future biochemical recurrence.
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