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Molecular classification of green tea catechin-sensitive and green tea catechin-resistant prostate cancer in the TRAMP mice model by quantitative real-time PCR gene profiling
35
Citations
20
References
2005
Year
EngineeringPathologyGene Expression ProfilingTumor BiologyCap ProgressionGreen Tea CatechinBiostatisticsMolecular DiagnosticsGreen TeaSystems BiologyTramp Mice ModelProstatic DiseaseGene ExpressionPharmacologyPrognostic BiomarkersCancer GenomicsMolecular ClassificationQpcr Gene ProfilingMedicine
We previously found that human prostate cancer (CaP) progression is accompanied by differential expression of a panel of 8 informative genes, some of which are metabolically related. Gene profiling focused on this 8-gene pack by northern blot analysis in combination with standard clinical information provided reliable prognostic prediction of human CaP. For a better insight into the potential of this 8-gene signature in tumor detection/classification and therapeutic response, we determined, by qPCR, the expression of these informative genes in the TRAMP mice model of CaP progression. The 8-genes signature resulted effective in discriminating, by linear discriminant analysis (LDA), the prostate of wild type mice from transgenic TRAMP mice developing CaP (P < 0.0002). Since it is known that Green Tea Catechin (GTC) administration to TRAMP mice results in a substantial delay of CaP progression in 80% of the animals, while 20% remain unresponsive, we determined the 8-gene signature in the prostates of GTC-sensitive and GTC-resistant mice. LDA discriminated benign tissue from CaP (i.e. wild-type + chemoprevented, GTC-sensitive TRAMP mice, in which CaP progression was delayed, was discriminated from TRAMP mice + GTC-resistant TRAMP mice, in which CaP developed irrespective of GTC administration; P < 0.01). Moreover, GTC-sensitive TRAMP mice bearing CaP were discriminated from GTCs-resistant ones, (P = 0.0001). These results show that qPCR gene profiling, based on the signature of the 8-genes selected by us, could represent an appropriate means for studying the biological behavior of CaP, which may lead to identifying new tools of potential prognostic value, in that a molecular classification for the presence/absence of cancer and for discriminating GTCs-responsive from GTC-resistant CaP is provided.
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