In silico dissection of cell-type-associated patterns of gene expression in prostate cancer

RO Stuart, W Wachsman, CC Berry… - Proceedings of the …, 2004 - National Acad Sciences
RO Stuart, W Wachsman, CC Berry, J Wang-Rodriguez, L Wasserman, I Klacansky, D Masys
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2004National Acad Sciences
Prostate tumors are complex entities composed of malignant cells mixed and interacting with
nonmalignant cells. However, molecular analyses by standard gene expression profiling are
limited because spatial information and nontumor cell types are lost in sample preparation.
We scored 88 prostate specimens for relative content of tumor, benign hyperplastic
epithelium, stroma, and dilated cystic glands. The proportions of these cell types were then
linked in silico to gene expression levels determined by microarray analysis, revealing …
Prostate tumors are complex entities composed of malignant cells mixed and interacting with nonmalignant cells. However, molecular analyses by standard gene expression profiling are limited because spatial information and nontumor cell types are lost in sample preparation. We scored 88 prostate specimens for relative content of tumor, benign hyperplastic epithelium, stroma, and dilated cystic glands. The proportions of these cell types were then linked in silico to gene expression levels determined by microarray analysis, revealing unique cell-specific profiles. Gene expression differences for malignant and nonmalignant epithelial cells (tumor versus benign hyperplastic epithelium) could be identified without being confounded by contributions from stroma that dominate many samples or sacrificing possible paracrine influences. Cell-specific expression of selected genes was validated by immunohistochemistry and quantitative PCR. The results provide patterns of gene expression for these three lineages with relevance to pathogenetic, diagnostic, and therapeutic considerations.
National Acad Sciences