TY - JOUR
T1 - Large-scale profiling of serum metabolites in African American and European American patients with bladder cancer reveals metabolic pathways associated with patient survival
AU - Vantaku, Venkatrao
AU - Donepudi, Sri Ramya
AU - Piyarathna, Danthasinghe Waduge Badrajee
AU - Amara, Chandra Sekhar
AU - Ambati, Chandrashekar R.
AU - Tang, Wei
AU - Putluri, Vasanta
AU - Chandrashekar, Darshan S.
AU - Varambally, Sooryanarayana
AU - Terris, Martha Kennedy
AU - Davies, Kimberly
AU - Ambs, Stefan
AU - Bollag, Roni Jacob
AU - Apolo, Andrea B.
AU - Sreekumar, Arun
AU - Putluri, Nagireddy
N1 - Funding Information:
This research was fully supported by the National Institutes of Health/ National Cancer Institute (R01CA220297 and R01CA216426 to Nagireddy Putluri) and the American Cancer Society (award 127430-RSG-15-105-01-CNE to Nagireddy Putluri); it was partially supported by the National Institutes of Health/National Cancer Institute (U01 CA167234 to Arun Sreekumar) and by funds from the Alkek Center for Molecular Discovery (to Arun Sreekumar). This project was also supported by the Agilent Foundation (to Arun Sreekumar), the Prostate Cancer Foundation (to Arun Sreekumar), Brockman Foundation, the Helis Research Foundation (to Arun Sreekumar), the Agilent Technologies Center of Excellence in Mass Spectrometry at Baylor College of Medicine, the Metabolomics Core and the Population Sciences Biorepository Core at Baylor College of Medicine with funding from the National Institutes of Health (P30 CA125123 to Nagireddy Putluri and Arun Sreekumar), the Proteomics and Metabolomics Core Facility of the Cancer Prevention and Research Institute of Texas (RP170005 to Nagireddy Putluri), and the Dan L. Duncan Cancer Center.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2019 American Cancer Society
PY - 2019/3/15
Y1 - 2019/3/15
N2 - Background: African Americans (AAs) experience a disproportionally high rate of bladder cancer (BLCA) deaths even though their incidence rates are lower than those of other patient groups. Using a metabolomics approach, this study investigated how AA BLCA may differ molecularly from European Americans (EAs) BLCA, and it examined serum samples from patients with BLCA with the aim of identifying druggable metabolic pathways in AA patients. Methods: Targeted metabolomics was applied to measure more than 300 metabolites in serum samples from 2 independent cohorts of EA and AA patients with BLCA and healthy EA and AA controls via liquid chromatography–mass spectrometry, and this was followed by the identification of altered metabolic pathways with a focus on AA BLCA. A subset of the differential metabolites was validated via absolute quantification with the Biocrates AbsoluteIDQ p180 kit. The clinical significance of the findings was further examined in The Cancer Genomic Atlas BLCA data set. Results: Fifty-three metabolites, mainly related to amino acid, lipid, and nucleotide metabolism, were identified that showed significant differences in abundance between AA and EA BLCA. For example, the levels of taurine, glutamine, glutamate, aspartate, and serine were elevated in serum samples from AA patients versus EA patients. By mapping these metabolites to genes, this study identified significant relations with regulators of metabolism such as malic enzyme 3, prolyl 3-hydroxylase 2, and lysine demethylase 2A that predicted patient survival exclusively in AA patients with BLCA. Conclusions: This metabolic profile of serum samples might be used to assess risk progression in AA BLCA. These first-in-field findings describe metabolic alterations in AA BLCA and emphasize a potential biological basis for BLCA health disparities.
AB - Background: African Americans (AAs) experience a disproportionally high rate of bladder cancer (BLCA) deaths even though their incidence rates are lower than those of other patient groups. Using a metabolomics approach, this study investigated how AA BLCA may differ molecularly from European Americans (EAs) BLCA, and it examined serum samples from patients with BLCA with the aim of identifying druggable metabolic pathways in AA patients. Methods: Targeted metabolomics was applied to measure more than 300 metabolites in serum samples from 2 independent cohorts of EA and AA patients with BLCA and healthy EA and AA controls via liquid chromatography–mass spectrometry, and this was followed by the identification of altered metabolic pathways with a focus on AA BLCA. A subset of the differential metabolites was validated via absolute quantification with the Biocrates AbsoluteIDQ p180 kit. The clinical significance of the findings was further examined in The Cancer Genomic Atlas BLCA data set. Results: Fifty-three metabolites, mainly related to amino acid, lipid, and nucleotide metabolism, were identified that showed significant differences in abundance between AA and EA BLCA. For example, the levels of taurine, glutamine, glutamate, aspartate, and serine were elevated in serum samples from AA patients versus EA patients. By mapping these metabolites to genes, this study identified significant relations with regulators of metabolism such as malic enzyme 3, prolyl 3-hydroxylase 2, and lysine demethylase 2A that predicted patient survival exclusively in AA patients with BLCA. Conclusions: This metabolic profile of serum samples might be used to assess risk progression in AA BLCA. These first-in-field findings describe metabolic alterations in AA BLCA and emphasize a potential biological basis for BLCA health disparities.
KW - bladder cancer
KW - liquid chromatography–mass spectrometry (LC-MS)
KW - metabolomics
KW - racial disparity
KW - serum
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U2 - 10.1002/cncr.31890
DO - 10.1002/cncr.31890
M3 - Article
C2 - 30602056
AN - SCOPUS:85059450412
SN - 0008-543X
VL - 125
SP - 921
EP - 932
JO - Cancer
JF - Cancer
IS - 6
ER -