posted on 2011-11-25, 11:15authored byFriederike Teichert
To improve prostate cancer management in humans who have, or are at risk of
developing, the disease, biomarkers are required to aid early diagnosis and
monitoring of response to chemotherapeutic or chemopreventive intervention.
In this project metabonomic and peptidomic approaches were used to study
biological changes associated with prostate carcinogenesis in a transgenic mouse
model (TRAMP, TRansgenic Adenocarcinoma of the Mouse Prostate). Observed
changes were compared with pathological alterations. Metabolome and peptidome
analyses were conducted in TRAMP mice exposed to chemopreventive intervention
with green tea polyphenols (GTP). Effects of consumption of GTP or black tea
theaflavins on the plasma and urine metabonome/peptidome in patients with benign
prostatic hyperplasia (BPH) were also investigated. Oxidative stress status reflected
by urinary 8-oxo-7,8-dihydro-2’-deoxyguanosine (8-oxodG) was assessed in mice
and humans on tea polyphenols.
Metabonomic profiling revealed that at early stages of carcinogenesis in mice,
alterations of tumour levels of choline metabolites resembled the human disease. In
contrast, in advanced stages of TRAMP prostate carcinogenesis, phospholipid
metabolism is affected differently by malignancy than in its human counterpart.
Disturbed prostate-specific citrate metabolism seems common to both human and
TRAMP prostate tumours when compared to normal tissue. These results suggest
that the TRAMP mouse may be a better model with respect to humans of early stage
carcinogenesis with minor proliferative lesions than of more advanced stages of
malignancy.
Urinary 8-oxodG levels were not affected by presence of prostate cancer or
intervention with tea. Metabolic profiling gave evidence for an effect of GTP on
energy metabolism in both mice and humans. Although TRAMP and GTP-groupspecific
metabonomic and peptidomic changes were found in plasma and urine, none
of these metabolites or peptides could be unambiguously identified as biomarkers of
carcinogenesis or GTP exposure. Among possible confounding factors which should
be taken into consideration in future metabonomic/peptidomic studies is the host’s
gut microflora.