grant

Polymorphic L1 transposons as a Genetic Variable Distinguishing Aggressive from Indolent Prostate Cancer

Organization SOUTHEAST LOUISIANA VETERANS HEALTH CARELocation NEW ORLEANS, UNITED STATESPosted 30 Sept 2022Deadline 30 Dec 2026
VANIHUS FederalResearch GrantFY2026APC - Adenomatous Polyposis ColiAPC ProteinAPC geneAPC genesAPC mutationAPC tumor suppressorAdenomatosis Polyposis Coli GeneAdenomatous Polyposis ColiAdenomatous Polyposis Coli ProteinAdenomatous Polyposis Coli mutationAgeAnti-OncogenesAntioncogenesAssayAutomobile DrivingBioassayBiological AssayBiological MarkersBirthBloodBlood Reticuloendothelial SystemBlood SampleBlood specimenBody TissuesBreast Cancer PatientBreast Tumor PatientCancer PatientCancer Suppressor GenesCancersCase-Comparison StudiesCase-Compeer StudiesCase-Referent StudiesCase-Referrent StudiesCase/Control StudiesClinicClinical EvaluationClinical TestingClinical TrialsColorectal CancerDNADNA DamageDNA InjuryDNA Repair GeneDNA mutationDNA repair proteinDP2.5DataData SetDefectDeletion of DNA SequencesDeoxyribonucleic AcidDetectionDevelopmentDiagnosisDiseaseDisease ProgressionDisorderElementsEmerogenesEthnic OriginEthnicityEventExclusionFrequenciesFutureGene AlterationGene MutationGenesGeneticGenetic ChangeGenetic MarkersGenetic defectGenetic mutationGenomeGenome InstabilityGenomic DNAGenomic InstabilityGenomicsGoalsHealthHealth CareHuman GenomeIndolentInflammationInsertional MutagenesisLegal patentLinkLong Interspersed ElementsMalignant NeoplasmsMalignant TumorMalignant neoplasm of prostateMalignant prostatic tumorMetastatic Prostate CancerMethodologyMethodsMutateMutationNew Drug ApprovalsOnco-Suppressor GenesOncogenes-Tumor SuppressorsOutcomeOutcome StudyPARP InhibitorPARP-1 inhibitorPARPiParturitionPatentsPatient outcomePatient-Centered OutcomesPatient-Focused OutcomesPatientsPoly(ADP-ribose) Polymerase InhibitorPoly(ADP-ribose) polymerase 1 inhibitorProstateProstate CAProstate CA therapyProstate CancerProstate Cancer therapyProstate Carcinoma MetastaticProstate GlandProstate malignancyProstatic GlandPublishingRNA SeqRNA sequencingRNAseqRecessive OncogenesReportingResearch DesignRetroelementsRetrotransposonRiskRisk AssessmentRisk FactorsSamplingSequence DeletionSightSourceStatistical Data AnalysesStatistical Data AnalysisStatistical Data InterpretationStudy TypeTestingThinkingTimeTissuesTumor Suppressing GenesTumor Suppressor GenesUrologyVeteransVisionWorkagesanti-cancer researchbio-markersbiologic markerbiomarkerbiomarker discoverycancer diagnosiscancer progressioncancer researchcancer typecase-control surveycase-controlled studiesclinic readyclinical readyclinical relevanceclinical testclinically relevantcohortcostcost effectivedesigndesigningdetection methoddetection proceduredetection techniquedevelopmentaldrivingefficacy testingentire genomefull genomegDNAgene biomarkergene defectgene expression biomarkergene markergene signature biomarkergene testinggene-based testinggenetic biomarkergenetic make-upgenetic makeupgenetic testinggenome mutationgenome sequencinggenomic deletionhigh riskhuman DNAhuman whole genomeimprovedindividuals with breast cancerinventionmalignancymenmutant alleleneoplasm progressionneoplasm/cancerneoplastic progressionnew approachesnew markernovelnovel approachesnovel biomarkernovel markernovel strategiesnovel strategyoncosuppressor geneover-treatmentovertreatmentpatient oriented outcomespatients with breast cancerperson with breast cancerpredictive biological markerpredictive biomarkerspredictive markerpredictive molecular biomarkerprospectiveprospective testprostate cancer progressionprostate cancer treatmentprototyperesearch clinical testingstatistical analysisstudy designsuccesstargeted sequencingthoughtstranscriptome sequencingtranscriptomic sequencingtumor DNAtumor cell DNAtumor progressiontumor-specific DNAvisual functionwhole genome
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Full Description

The development and approval of new drugs (such as PARP inhibitors) marks a breakthrough in
prostate cancer treatment. Despite this progress, metastatic prostate cancer remains a lethal

disease highlighting a critical need for discovery of biomarkers and development of tests that can

timely identify prostate cancer patients who are at highly elevated risk for developing metastatic

disease before it appears. Having such a test would allow clinicians to treat these patients early

to stop disease progression to its aggressive form.

The proposed study identifies predictive biomarkers and describes useful clinical testing for their

presence in the human genome. Our preliminary analysis of Whole Genome Sequencing (WGS)

datasets and samples from our unique cohort of prostate cancer patients shows that specific

polymorphic L1 retrotransposons (pL1s) are enriched in the genomes of patients with metastatic

prostate cancer, meaning that this genetic variable is a potential new and powerful marker of

aggressive disease. Prior work has shown that pL1s can contribute to cancer by insertional

mutagenesis. Our findings show that in addition to previously reported insertional mutagenesis,

pL1s cause large genomic deletions, making the presence of more pL1s in some patients'

genomes highly relevant to prostate cancer progression. Furthermore, we have developed and

experimentally validated the utility of a novel, high throughput method for detection of pL1s in

human DNA. This method is more sensitive and cost effective than WGS, making performing a

case-control study of genomic pL1 content on hundreds or thousands of samples possible.

Capitalizing on these findings and methods, we hypothesize that a high number of specific pL1s

present in the genomes of prostate cancer patients is associated with an increased risk of

developing metastatic disease because these elements drive genomic instability and, thus,

disease progression. We propose two specific aims that use our unique cohort composed of

patients with either indolent or aggressive prostate cancers, available WGS datasets, and our

novel methodologies to test this hypothesis. Aim 1 will perform a case-control study to identify

pL1s present in genomes of prostate cancer patients in our cohort. Aim 2 will perform targeted

sequencing of genes frequently mutated in metastatic prostate cancer to identify pL1-associated

mutations and novel mechanisms by which pL1s may contribute to cancer progression.

By interrogating the genomes of ~400 prostate cancer patients for the presence of pL1s and for

mutations in genes relevant to prostate cancer, the proposed study will determine whether the

number and/or composition of pL1s in patient genomes (alone or in combination with identified

gene mutations) is positively associated with aggressive prostate cancer and to determine the

frequency of mutagenic events cause by pL1s in specific genes. The long-term outcome of the

success of this proposal will be clinically ready reliable genetic tests prospectively identifying men,

including Veterans, who are at high risk of developing aggressive prostate cancer. The test could

be performed using blood DNA at any time, including prior to prostate cancer diagnosis.

Grant Number: 5I01BX005633-04
NIH Institute/Center: VA

Principal Investigator: Victoria Belancio

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