Metabolic Rewiring Promotes AA PCa by Regulating Stromal-Epithelial Interaction
Project Number5R01CA227559-03
Contact PI/Project LeaderSREEKUMAR, ARUN Other PIs
Awardee OrganizationBAYLOR COLLEGE OF MEDICINE
Description
Abstract Text
The long-term objective of our research plan is to reduce the disproportionate effects of prostate cancer on
African American men. In this application, we have used the technique of metabolomic profiling to uncover
underlying biochemical differences between prostate cancers of African American and European American
origin. Metabolomics describes the science of quantifying the levels of metabolites (e.g., small molecules) that
are the byproducts of cellular metabolism. That is to say, in this kind of analysis we are measuring the
biochemical entities (or metabolites) that are produced by the functional machinery of the cell. With knowledge
of the identity of specific metabolites we can infer the biological processes that produced them, thus gaining
insight into a cell’s metabolism. Given this, a guiding principle of application is that unique biochemical
differences exist between prostate cancers of African American and European American origin and that these
differences can influence the tumors and their surrounding cells termed stroma such that together they can
promote the progression of the tumors. Since African American prostate cancer grow and progress more
rapidly than European American tumors, our studies will potentially address some of the causes underlying
prostate cancer health disparity. In addition, it will also build a first-of-its-kind biomarker panel that can predict
cancer recurrence in ancestry verified African American men with prostate cancer. In this proposal, we will i)
identify the biochemical mechanism that drives elevated levels of inosine in African American Prostate Cancer,
ii) evaluate the function of elevated inosine in making African American tumors aggressive and invoke tumor
promoting properties in the surrounding stromal cells and iii) develop plasma based metabolic markers for
biochemical recurrence in African American men. At the conclusion of this study, we will have developed a
racially derived metabolomic model for prostate cancer as well as identified candidate pathways for future drug
targeting. We would have also built a proof-of-principle metabolite-based test with the ability to predict cancer
recurrence based on the ancestry of the patient. In the longer term, this test will be validated and translated
into a clinical assay that should have the ability to predict the recurrence of prostate cancer in an ancestry
informed fashion in prostate cancer patients.
Public Health Relevance Statement
At present, it is not known how the prostate cancer metabolome contributes to health disparities. The
information gleaned from this proposal could rapidly revolutionize current diagnostic, prognostic and
therapeutic approaches by revealing the biological underpinnings of prostate cancer health disparity. This
proposal investigates the role of altered metabolism in African-American Prostate Cancers in remodeling
epithelial-stromal interaction and promoting tumor progression.
No Sub Projects information available for 5R01CA227559-03
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