본문으로 건너뛰기
← 뒤로

Multi-omics genetic study revealing ferroptosis regulator CTSB driving prostate cancer progression by modulating the immune microenvironment.

Naunyn-Schmiedeberg's archives of pharmacology 2026 Vol.399(2) p. 3073-3088

Song J, Zhang Q, Ma M, Ma P, Chen R, Wang Z

📝 환자 설명용 한 줄

The progression and mechanisms of drug resistance in prostate cancer are highly complex, with the ferroptosis pathway playing a critical role.

🔬 핵심 임상 통계 (초록에서 자동 추출 — 원문 검증 권장)
  • p-value p < 0.01
  • p-value p < 0.05

이 논문을 인용하기

BibTeX ↓ RIS ↓
APA Song J, Zhang Q, et al. (2026). Multi-omics genetic study revealing ferroptosis regulator CTSB driving prostate cancer progression by modulating the immune microenvironment.. Naunyn-Schmiedeberg's archives of pharmacology, 399(2), 3073-3088. https://doi.org/10.1007/s00210-025-04593-y
MLA Song J, et al.. "Multi-omics genetic study revealing ferroptosis regulator CTSB driving prostate cancer progression by modulating the immune microenvironment.." Naunyn-Schmiedeberg's archives of pharmacology, vol. 399, no. 2, 2026, pp. 3073-3088.
PMID 41020944

Abstract

The progression and mechanisms of drug resistance in prostate cancer are highly complex, with the ferroptosis pathway playing a critical role. We utilized multi-omics Mendelian randomization (MR) to assess the genetic causal link between ferroptosis gene/protein expression and prostate cancer, investigating potential mediation by 731 immune cell types. Furthermore, differential expression analysis, immune infiltration analysis, single-cell RNA sequencing, gene set enrichment analysis (GSEA), and drug prediction were integrated for multidimensional validation and mechanistic insight. Our results identified cathepsin B (CTSB) as a key causal risk factor associated with iron death in the development of prostate cancer (odds ratio (OR) > 1, p < 0.01). Colocalization analysis (SNP.PP.H4 > 0.95) ruled out confounding biases. Mediation MR analysis revealed that CTSB partially mediates its carcinogenic effects by regulating various immune cells, such as PD-L1 + monocytes and CD45 + T cells (OR > 1, p < 0.05). Further analysis indicated that CTSB gene/protein expression was highly expressed in normal prostate basal epithelial cells and myeloid cells, while it was downregulated in tumor tissues and neoplastic epithelial cells (p < 0.05). Notably, its expression was positively correlated with the infiltration of multiple immune cell types (cor > 0, p < 0.05). GSEA demonstrated that high CTSB expression was significantly enriched in pro-cancer pathways, including epithelial-mesenchymal transition, angiogenesis, inflammatory response, and apoptosis (normalized enrichment score (NES) > 2, false discovery rate (FDR) < 0.001). Drug prediction analyses suggested that targeting CTSB (e.g., with bortezomib) in combination with immunotherapy may represent a novel therapeutic strategy. This study provides the first evidence of the causal role of iron death-immune interactions in prostate cancer, offering new targets for precision treatment.

MeSH Terms

Male; Humans; Ferroptosis; Prostatic Neoplasms; Tumor Microenvironment; Disease Progression; Gene Expression Regulation, Neoplastic; Mendelian Randomization Analysis; Multiomics; Cathepsin B

같은 제1저자의 인용 많은 논문 (5)