Departamento de Toxicología, CINVESTAV-IPN, Mexico City, Mexico.
Centro de Investigación en Salud Poblacional, Instituto Nacional de Salud Pública (INSP), Cuernavaca, Morelos, México.
PLoS One. 2024 Aug 16;19(8):e0308092. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0308092. eCollection 2024.
Prostate cancer is the second most common neoplasia amongst men worldwide. Hereditary susceptibility and ancestral heritage are well-established risk factors that explain the disparity trends across different ethnicities, populations, and regions even within the same country. The Y-chromosome has been considered a prototype biomarker for male health. African, European, Middle Eastern, and Hispanic ancestries exhibit the highest incidences of such neoplasia; Asians have the lowest rates. Nonetheless, the contribution of ancestry patterns has been scarcely explored among Latino males. The Mexican population has an extremely diverse genetic architecture where all the aforementioned ancestral backgrounds converge. Trans-ethnic research could illuminate the aetiology of prostate cancer, involving the migratory patterns, founder effects, and the ethnic contributions to its disparate incidence rates. The contribution of the ancestral heritage to prostate cancer risk were explored through a case-control study (152 cases and 372 controls) study in Mexican Mestizo males. Seventeen microsatellites were used to trace back the ancestral heritage using two Bayesian predictor methods. The lineage R1a seems to contribute to prostate cancer (ORadjusted:8.04, 95%CI:1.41-45.80) development, whereas E1b1a/E1b1b and GHIJ contributed to well-differentiated (Gleason ≤ 7), and late-onset prostate cancer. Meta-analyses reinforced our findings. The mentioned lineages exhibited a connection with the Middle Eastern and North African populations that enriched the patrilineal diversity to the southeast region of the Iberian Peninsula. This ancestral legacy arrived at the New World with the Spanish and Sephardim migrations. Our findings reinforced the contribution of family history and ethnic background to prostate cancer risk, although should be confirmed using a large sample size. Nonetheless, given its complex aetiology, in addition to the genetic component, the lifestyle and xenobiotic exposition could also influence the obtained results.
前列腺癌是全球男性第二大常见肿瘤。遗传易感性和祖源是已被证实的风险因素,可以解释不同种族、人群和地区之间的差异趋势,甚至在同一国家内也是如此。Y 染色体被认为是男性健康的原型生物标志物。非洲、欧洲、中东和西班牙裔的祖源发病率最高;亚洲的发病率最低。然而,在拉丁裔男性中,祖源模式的贡献很少被探索。墨西哥人口的遗传结构极其多样化,所有上述祖源背景都汇聚于此。跨种族研究可以阐明前列腺癌的病因,包括迁徙模式、创始效应以及祖源对其不同发病率的贡献。通过对墨西哥梅斯蒂索男性的病例对照研究(152 例病例和 372 例对照),探讨了祖源对前列腺癌风险的贡献。使用两种贝叶斯预测方法,通过 17 个微卫星追踪祖源。谱系 R1a 似乎与前列腺癌(调整后的 OR:8.04,95%CI:1.41-45.80)的发展有关,而 E1b1a/E1b1b 和 GHIJ 则与分化良好(Gleason ≤ 7)和发病晚的前列腺癌有关。荟萃分析证实了我们的发现。这些谱系与中东和北非人群有关,丰富了伊比利亚半岛东南部的父系多样性。这种祖源遗产随着西班牙人和塞法迪人的迁徙来到新大陆。我们的发现加强了家族史和种族背景对前列腺癌风险的贡献,尽管需要使用大样本量进行确认。然而,鉴于其复杂的病因,除了遗传因素外,生活方式和外源性物质暴露也可能影响获得的结果。