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Department of Cancer Biology, Lerner Research Institute, The Cleveland Clinic Foundation, Cleveland, Ohio [S. J. P., P. L. P., A. P. C., G. C.], and Department of Epidemiology and Biostatistics, Case Western Reserve University, Cleveland, Ohio 44106-4945 [D. V. C., J. S. W.]
| Abstract |
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| Introduction |
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189,000 men in the United States were diagnosed with prostate cancer, and 30,200 men died from this disease (1)
. Risk factors include age, ethnicity, family history, and diet (2)
. A strong family history indicative of a highly penetrant gene is believed to account for only 510% of prostate cancers, whereas a larger percentage may be because of common polymorphisms that give rise to a low risk of disease (3
, 4)
. A great deal of interest has focused recently on the role of genes involved in the metabolism, biosynthesis, and regulation of androgens in the occurrence and progression of prostate cancer. The CYP6 family of enzymes function in a wide variety of metabolic pathways involving both endogenous and exogenous compounds (5) . Their involvement in the metabolism of steroids, as well as environmental xenobiotics, suggests that some may affect prostate cancer risk (3, 4, 5) . Studies on the activity and expression of CYP3A subfamily members in liver extracts have shown a high degree of polymorphic expression (5) . The CYP3A locus consists of four genes, CYP3A4, CYP3A5, CYP3A7, and CYP3A43, all of which reside in a 231-kb region of chromosome 7q21.1 (6) .
It has been estimated that up to 60% of the variability in CYP3A4 activity may be because of a genetic component (7) . A SNP in the nifedipine-specific response element in the promoter of the CYP3A4 gene (alternatively termed g.-392A>G, CYP3A4-V, CYP3A4*1B, see website7 for unified nomenclature) has been reported (8) . Case-only studies of Caucasians (8) and of African-Americans (9) have detected associations between CYP3A4*1B and presentation with biologically aggressive disease. It has been postulated that the presence of the CYP3A4*1B allele decreases the amount of CYP3A4 protein, leading to a reduction of testosterone metabolism and, therefore, more availability of testosterone for conversion to dihydrotestosterone, the most potent androgen affecting the growth and differentiation of prostate cells (8) . However, several in vivo studies on the functional effect of CYP3A4*1B have failed to reveal any meaningful link between this polymorphism and activity of the CYP3A4 enzyme (10, 11, 12, 13) .
CYP3A5 is expressed in a polymorphic manner in 1029% of adult livers (14, 15, 16) . Several polymorphic variants in CYP3A5 appear to have a functional effect on CYP3A5 activity, including an intronic SNP that affects splicing of the CYP3A5 transcript. The CYP3A5*1 allele that produces a correctly spliced transcript has a frequency of 0.15 to 0.45 in Caucasians and African-Americans, respectively (17) . The nonfunctional allele (CYP3A5*3, g.6986A>G) occurs in intron 3 of CYP3A5, creating a cryptic splice site leading to the inclusion of a novel exon, and ultimately a premature stop codon (16 , 17) . Only individuals with at least one CYP3A5*1 allele express CYP3A5 at a high level (16, 17, 18) . CYP3A5 represents at least half of the CYP3A content in the liver and jejunum of most individuals carrying a CYP3A5*1 allele, and CYP3A4 levels in those individuals appear to correlate with CYP3A5 levels (17 , 18) .
As no functional significance has been ascribed to the CYP3A4*1B variant allele, an association between CYP3A4*1B and prostate cancer phenotypes may be because of linkage with a functional polymorphism elsewhere in the CYP3A locus. CYP3A5 is an attractive candidate gene for this association because of evidence that it is expressed in normal and tumor prostate tissue (19 , 20) , whereas CYP3A4 has been reported as expressed in only 014% of normal prostate tissues (19, 20, 21) . The hypothesis that prostate cancer risk may be associated with CYP3A5 genotypes (17) has been strengthened recently by the report of linkage disequilibrium between the CYP3A4 and CYP3A5 alleles (20) . To additionally investigate this possibility, we used a family-based case-control study to investigate the association between prostate cancer and the CYP3A4*1A/*1B alleles, CYP3A5*1/*3 alleles, and CYP3A4/CYP3A5 haplotypes.
| Materials and Methods |
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Genotyping of CYP3A4 was performed using the SNuPe genotyping assay (Amersham Biosciences). A 399-bp PCR fragment was generated with the following primers: 5'-TCTGTGTGAGGAGTTTGGTGAGGAAAG-3', and 5'-CTGTGCTCTGCCTGCAGTTGGAAG-3'. The SNuPe reaction primer was 5'-GCCATAGAGACAAGGGCA-3', and products were analyzed on a MegaBACE 1000 DNA Analysis Workstation (Amersham Biosciences). Genotyping of CYP3A5 was performed with an allele-specific PCR assay (amplification refractory mutation system; Ref. 25 ). The common forward primer 5'-GAGAGTGGCATAGGAGATACCCACGTATG-3' was used with either the "G" allele primer: 5'-GGTAATGTGGTCCAAACAGGGAAGAGATTC-3' or the "A" allele primer: 5'-GGTAATGTGGTCCAAACAGGGAAGAGATTT-3'. A control primer set was included to verify amplification. Complete CYP3A5 genotype information was obtained, whereas CYP3A4 genotype information was obtained for 433 cases and 469 controls.
Using the genotype information, we estimated haplotypes with the program PHASE (26) , and calculated the linkage disequilibrium between CYP3A4 and CYP3A5 alleles. We then calculated descriptive genotype and haplotype frequencies, stratified by case-control status. Finally, conditional logistic regression (with family as the matching variable, and a robust variance estimator) was used to estimate ORs and 95% CIs for the association among genotypes, haplotypes, and prostate cancer. In addition to an independent analysis of genotypes comparing one or more variants to the nonvariant, both genes were simultaneously included in the same regression model to assess the potential impact of CYP3A4 versus CYP3A5 on prostate cancer. Joint genotype and haplotype analysis was performed only on individuals who had genotypes for both CYP3A4 and CYP3A5 (433 cases and 469 controls)
To investigate the potential effect of genotype on disease aggressiveness, we stratified the analyses by the clinical characteristics of the cases at diagnosis. Aggressiveness was defined as "low" if a case Gleason score was <7 and the tumor category was <T2c, and "high" if the Gleason score was
7 or the tumor category was
T2c. The tumor category reflects the Tumor-Node-Metastasis System (27)
. In addition, any possible effect modification by age was evaluated by stratifying by age at diagnosis (<63 versus
63). The regression models adjusted for potential confounding by age, all of the Ps are from two-sided tests, and analyses were undertaken with S+ software (version 6.0; Insightful Corp.).
| Results |
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The CYP3A4*1B/CYP3A5*3 haplotype (i.e., encoding a nonfunctional CYP3A5 protein) was associated positively with prostate cancer risk (OR, 2.91; 95% CI, 1.366.23; P = 0.006). Although this haplotype is more common in African-Americans than Caucasians, it appears associated with risk in both ethnic groups (Table 3)
. The CYP3A4*1B/CYP3A5*1 haplotype was weakly associated with an inverse risk of prostate cancer (OR, 0.65, 95% CI, 0.411.02; P = 0.06), and this association was stronger in Caucasians with less aggressive disease (OR, 0.07, 95% CI, 0.010.51; P = 0.009).
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| Discussion |
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Other functional variant(s) on the haplotype defined in part by the CYP3A4 and CYP3A5 alleles could be the causal variants that underlie the associations seen here. Two variant alleles predicted to lead to a truncated CYP3A5 protein have been reported to occur at a low frequency in African-Americans (CYP3A5*6, CYP3A5*7; Refs. 16
, 17
). Seven linked variants in the promoter region of CYP3A7 (CYP3A7*1C) have also been reported that appear to have arisen from a gene conversion event, wherein a portion of the CYP3A4 promoter was substituted for the CYP3A7 promoter sequence (17)
. CYP3A7 was originally thought to be expressed only during fetal development; however, it appears that this variant promoter (CYP3A7*1C) may allow high expression of CYP3A7 into adulthood (17
, 29)
. Although there is a great deal of overlap in the substrates used by the CYP3A family members, differences in specific substrate affinities exist (5)
. For example, CYP3A4 catalyzes the 6ß-hydroxylation of testosterone to a greater extent than the other CYP3A isoforms, whereas CYP3A7 has higher 16
-hydroxylase activity against dehydroepiandrosterone and dehydroepiandrosterone 3 sulfate (30)
. Additionally, CYP3A4 effectively inactivates aflatoxin B1, whereas CYP3A5 is more efficient at activating aflatoxin B1 to its carcinogenic form (31)
. The relative levels of each CYP3A family member may play diverse roles in the metabolism of substrates that may increase or decrease the risk of prostate cancer.
In summary, we have shown that the risk of prostate cancer aggressiveness attributed previously to the CYP3A4 variant is not simply a manifestation of allelic association with the CYP3A5 variant. Moreover, there may exist other functional variants in this region that reside on the haplotypes defined by these variants that affect the risk and aggressiveness of prostate cancer.
| Acknowledgments |
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| Footnotes |
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1 This work was supported in part by NIH Grants RO1 CA88164 and RO1 CA94211, Department of Defense Prostate Cancer Research Program DAMD17-98-1-8589, the General Motors Foundation, and The Cleveland Clinic Foundation Taussig Cancer Center. Part of the work of J. S. W. reported in this paper was undertaken during the tenure of a Visiting Scientist Award by the IARC. ![]()
2 These authors contributed equally to this work. ![]()
3 Present address: Department of Preventive Medicine, University of Southern California, Los Angeles, CA 90033-0800. ![]()
4 Present address: Cancer Center, University of California, San Francisco, CA 94143-0808. ![]()
5 Present address to whom requests for reprints should be addressed, at Department of Epidemiology and Biostatistics, University of California, San Francisco, 500 Parrassus Ave., MU-420 West San Francisco, CA 94143-0560. Phone: (415) 476-1374; Fax: (415) 476-6014; E-mail: witte{at}darwin.cwru.edu ![]()
6 The abbreviations used are: CYP, cytochrome P450; OR, odds ratio; CI, confidence interval; PSA, prostate-specific antigen; SNP, single nucleotide polymorphism. ![]()
7 Internet address: http://www.imm.ki.SE/CYPalleles/. ![]()
Received 9/30/02; revised 3/10/03; accepted 5/27/03.
| References |
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