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Table 4_Metabolic readouts of tumor instructed normal tissues (TINT) identify aggressive prostate cancer subgroups for tailored therapy.docx

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posted on 2025-04-07, 04:03 authored by Ilona Dudka, João Figueira, Pernilla Wikström, Anders Bergh, Gerhard Gröbner
Introduction

Prostate cancer (PC) diagnosis relies on histopathological examination of prostate biopsies, which is restricted by insufficient sampling of all tumors present. Including samples from non-PC but tumor instructed normal tissues (TINT) may increase the diagnostic power by displaying the adaptive responses in benign tissues near tumors.

Methods

Here, we applied high-resolution magic angle spinning nuclear magnetic resonance (HR MAS NMR) to identify metabolomic biomarkers of possible diagnostic value in benign prostate tissues near low/high-grade tumors.

Results

Benign samples near high-grade tumors (B ISUP 3 + 4) exhibited altered metabolic profiles compared to those close to low-grade tumors (B ISUP 1 + 2). The levels of six metabolites differentiated between the two groups; myo-inositol, lysine, serine and combined signal of lysine/leucine/arginine were increased in benign samples near high-grade tumors (B ISUP 3 + 4) compared to near low-grade tumors (B ISUP 1 + 2), while levels of ethanolamine and lactate were decreased. Additionally, we revealed metabolic differences in non-cancer tissues as a function of their distance to the nearest tumor. Eight metabolites (glutathione, glutamate, combined signal of glutamate/glutamine - glx, glycerol, inosine, ethanolamine, serine and arginine) differentiated between benign tissue located close to the tumor (d ≤ 5 mm) compared to those far away (d ≥ 1 cm).

Conclusion

Our HR MAS NMR-based approach identified metabolic signatures in prostate biopsies that reflect the response of benign tissues to the presence of nearby located tumors in the same prostate and confirmed the power of the TINT concept for improved PC diagnostics and understanding of tumor-tissue interactions.

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    Frontiers in Molecular Biosciences

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