Transcriptomes of Prostate Cancer with TMPRSS2:ERG and Other ETS Fusions

Author:

Stopsack Konrad H.1ORCID,Su Xiaofeng A.2ORCID,Vaselkiv J. Bailey1ORCID,Graff Rebecca E.345ORCID,Ebot Ericka M.1ORCID,Pettersson Andreas6ORCID,Lis Rosina T.7ORCID,Fiorentino Michelangelo18ORCID,Loda Massimo9ORCID,Penney Kathryn L.110ORCID,Lotan Tamara L.11ORCID,Mucci Lorelei A.1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. 1Department of Epidemiology, Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health, Boston, Massachusetts.

2. 2David H. Koch Institute for Integrative Cancer Research, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, Massachusetts.

3. 3Department of Epidemiology and Biostatistics, University of California San Francisco, San Francisco, California.

4. 4Division of Research, Kaiser Permanente Northern California, Oakland, California.

5. 5Helen Diller Family Comprehensive Cancer Center, University of California San Francisco, San Francisco, California.

6. 6Clinical Epidemiology Division, Department of Medicine Solna, Karolinska Institutet, Stockholm, Sweden.

7. 7Department of Pathology and Center for Molecular Oncologic Pathology, Dana-Farber Cancer Institute, Boston, Massachusetts.

8. 8Pathology Unit, Addarii Institute, S. Orsola-Malpighi Hospital, Bologna, Italy.

9. 9Department of Pathology, Weill Cornell Medical College, New York, New York.

10. 10Channing Division of Network Medicine, Department of Medicine, Brigham and Women's Hospital and Harvard Medical School, Boston, Maryland.

11. 11Department of Pathology, Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore, Maryland.

Abstract

Abstract The most common somatic event in primary prostate cancer is a fusion between the androgen-related TMPRSS2 gene and the ERG oncogene. Tumors with these fusions, which occur early in carcinogenesis, have a distinctive etiology. A smaller subset of other tumors harbor fusions between TMPRSS2 and members of the ETS transcription factor family other than ERG. To assess the genomic similarity of tumors with non-ERG ETS fusions and those with fusions involving ERG, this study derived a transcriptomic signature of non-ERG ETS fusions and assessed this signature and ERG-related gene expression in 1,050 men with primary prostate cancer from three independent population-based and hospital-based studies. Although non-ERG ETS fusions involving ETV1, ETV4, ETV5, or FLI1 were individually rare, they jointly accounted for one in seven prostate tumors. Genes differentially regulated between non-ERG ETS tumors and tumors without ETS fusions showed similar differential expression when ERG tumors and tumors without ETS fusions were compared (differences explained: R2 = 69–77%), including ETS-related androgen receptor (AR) target genes. Differences appeared to result from similarities among ETS tumors rather than similarities among non-ETS tumors. Gene sets associated with ERG fusions were consistent with gene sets associated with non-ERG ETS fusions, including fatty acid and amino acid metabolism, an observation that was robust across cohorts. Implications: Considering ETS fusions jointly may be useful for etiologic studies on prostate cancer, given that the transcriptome is profoundly impacted by ERG and non-ERG ETS fusions in a largely similar fashion, most notably genes regulating metabolic pathways.

Funder

Harvard-MIT Bridge Project

National Cancer Institute

Prostate Cancer Foundation

Publisher

American Association for Cancer Research (AACR)

Subject

Cancer Research,Oncology,Molecular Biology

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