近隣の暴力と肺がん進行との関連研究(Study links neighborhood violence, lung cancer progression)

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2024-06-24 イリノイ大学アーバナ・シャンペーン校

イリノイ大学の研究者たちは、暴力犯罪が多い地域に住む患者において、攻撃的な肺がんの潜在的な原因を特定しました。この研究では、暴力犯罪の多い地域と少ない地域に住む人々のストレス反応が異なり、それががん組織と健康組織の違いにも表れていることが明らかになりました。特に、高暴力地域に住む人々の肺がん腫瘍内でのグルココルチコイド受容体(GR)の結合が低く、GR調節遺伝子の活性も低下しています。これにより、炎症や細胞増殖の増加が見られ、肺がんの悪化につながっている可能性が示唆されました。

<関連情報>

近隣の暴力への暴露が肺腫瘍のグルココルチコイド受容体シグナル伝達に及ぼす影響 The effect of exposure to neighborhood violence on Glucocorticoid Receptor signaling in lung tumors

Hannah Heath;Jin Young Yoo;Sabrina Akter;Atharva Jain;Vani Sharma;Hannah McGee;Aiman Soliman;Abeer M. Mahmoud;Alicia K. Matthews;Robert A. Winn;Zeynep Madak-Erdogan;Sage J. Kim
Cancer Research Communications  Published:June 24 2024
DOI:https://doi.org/10.1158/2767-9764.CRC-24-0032

近隣の暴力と肺がん進行との関連研究(Study links neighborhood violence, lung cancer progression)

Abstract

Despite lower rates and intensity of smoking, Black men experience a higher incidence of lung cancer compared to White men. The racial disparity in lung cancer is particularly pronounced in Chicago, a highly segregated urban city. Neighborhood conditions, particularly social stress, may play a role in lung tumorigenesis. Preliminary studies indicate that Black men residing in neighborhoods with higher rates of violent crime have significantly higher levels of hair cortisol, an indicator of stress response. To examine the relationship between social stress exposure and gene expression in lung tumors, we investigated glucocorticoid receptor (GR) binding in 15 lung tumor samples in relation to GR target gene expression levels and zip code level residential violent crime rates. Spatial transcriptomics and a version of ChIP-sequencing known as CUT & RUN were used. Heatmap of genes, pathway analysis, and motif analysis were conducted at the statistical significance of p<0.05. GR recruitment to chromatin was correlated with zip code level residential violent crime rate and overall GR binding increased with higher violent crime rates. Our findings suggest that exposure to residential violent crime may influence tumor biology via reprogramming GR recruitment. Prioritizing lung cancer screening in neighborhoods with increased social stress, such as high levels of violent crime, may reduce racial disparities in lung cancer.

医療・健康
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