Whole-exome sequencing of Nigerian benign prostatic hyperplasia reveals increased alterations in apoptotic pathways
No Thumbnail Available
Date
2024-01-04
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
The Prostate April 2024 Vol 84 No. 5
Abstract
Background
Through whole-exome sequencing of 60 formalin-fixed paraffin-embedded Nigerian (NGRn) benign
prostatic hyperplasia (BPH) samples, we identified germline and somatic alterations in apoptotic
pathways impacting BPH development and progression. Prostate enlargement is a common
occurrence in male aging; however, this enlargement can lead to lower urinary tract symptoms that
negatively impact quality of life. This impact is disproportionately present in men of African ancestry.
BPH pathophysiology is poorly understood and studies examining non-European populations are
lacking.
Methods
In this study, NGRn BPH, normal prostate, and prostate cancer (PCa) tumor samples were
sequenced and compared to characterize genetic alterations in NGRn BPH.
Results
Two hundred and two nonbenign, ClinVar-annotated germline variants were present in NGRn BPH
samples. Six genes [BRCA1 (92%), HSD3B1 (85%), TP53 (37%), PMS2 (23%), BARD1 (20%),
and BRCA2 (17%)] were altered in at least 10% of samples; however, compared to NGRn normal
and tumor, the frequency of alterations in BPH samples showed no significant differences at the
gene or variant level. BRCA2_rs11571831 and TP53_rs1042522 germline alterations had a
statistically significant co-occurrence interaction in BPH samples. In at least two BPH samples, 173
genes harbored somatic variants known to be clinically actionable. Three genes (COL18A1, KIF16B,
and LRP1) showed a statistically significant (p < 0.05) higher frequency in BPH. NGRn BPH also had
five gene pairs (PKD1/KIAA0100, PKHD1/PKD1, DNAH9/LRP1B, NWD1/DCHS2, and
TCERG1/LMTK2) with statistically significant co-occurring interactions. Two hundred and seventynine
genes contained novel somatic variants in NGRn BPH. Three genes (CABP1, FKBP1C, and
RP11-595B24.2) had a statistically significant (p < 0.05) higher alteration frequency in NGRn BPH
and three were significantly higher in NGRn tumor (CACNA1A, DMKN, and CACNA2D2). Pairwise
Fisher's exact tests showed 14 gene pairs with statistically significant (p < 0.05) interactions and four
interactions approaching significance (p < 0.10). Mutational patterns in NGRn BPH were similar to
COSMIC (Catalog of Somatic Mutations in Cancer) signatures associated with aging and
dysfunctional DNA damage repair.
Conclusions
NGRn BPH contained significant germline alteration interactions (BRCA2_rs11571831
and TP53_rs1042522) and increased somatic alteration frequencies