Elsevier

Molecular Metabolism

Volume 8, February 2018, Pages 158-166
Molecular Metabolism

Original Article
Androgen receptor overexpression in prostate cancer in type 2 diabetes

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.molmet.2017.11.013Get rights and content
Under a Creative Commons license
open access

Highlights

  • Androgen receptor expression is elevated in prostate cancer in men with diabetes.

  • This correlates with altered IR and IGF-1R and protective estrogen receptor ligands.

  • Our results reveal new insights why these patients have worse prognosis.

Abstract

Objective

While prostate cancer does not occur more often in men with diabetes, survival is markedly reduced in this patient group. Androgen signaling is a known and major driver for prostate cancer progression. Therefore, we analyzed major components of the androgen signaling chain and cell proliferation in relation to type 2 diabetes.

Methods

Tumor content of 70 prostate tissue samples of men with type 2 diabetes and 59 samples of patients without diabetes was quantified by an experienced pathologist, and a subset of 51 samples was immunohistochemically stained for androgen receptor (AR). mRNA expression of AR, insulin receptor isoform A (IR-A) and B (IR-B), IGF-1 receptor (IGF1R), Cyp27A1 and Cyp7B1, PSA gene KLK3, PSMA gene FOLH1, Ki-67 gene MKI67, and estrogen receptor beta (ESR2) were analyzed by RT-qPCR.

Results

AR mRNA and protein expression were associated with the tumor content only in men with diabetes. AR expression also correlated with downstream targets PSA (KLK3) and PSMA (FOLH1) and increased cell proliferation. Only in diabetes, AR expression was correlated to higher IR-A/IR-B ratio and lower IR-B/IGF1R ratio, thus, in favor of the mitogenic isoforms. Reduced Cyp27A1 and increased Cyp7B1 expressions in tumor suggest lower levels of protective estrogen receptor ligands in diabetes.

Conclusions

We report elevated androgen receptor signaling and activity presumably due to altered insulin/IGF-1 receptors and decreased levels of protective estrogen receptor ligands in prostate cancer in men with diabetes. Our results reveal new insights why these patients have a worse prognosis. These findings provide the basis for future clinical trials to investigate treatment response in patients with prostate cancer and diabetes.

Keywords

Prostate cancer
Androgen receptor
Insulin receptor
IGF-1 receptor
Cyp27A1
Cyp7B1

Abbreviations

27HC
27-hydroxycholesterol
ADT
androgen-deprivation therapy
AR
androgen receptor
Cyp27A1
sterol 27-hydroxylase
Cyp7B1
25-hydroxycholesterol 7α-hydroxylase
DHT
dihydrotestosterone
ER
estrogen receptor
IGF1R
insulin like growth factor-1 receptor
IR
insulin receptor
IR-A
insulin receptor isoform A
IR-B
insulin receptor isoform B
OGTT
oral glucose tolerance test
PSA
prostate-specific antigen
PSMA
prostate-specific membrane antigen
SERM
selective estrogen receptor modulator
SREBP2
sterol regulatory element-binding protein 2

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