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Query: UMLS:C0005940 (
bone disease
)
7,459
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Bone morphogenic protein 7 (BMP7) counteracts physiological epithelial-to-mesenchymal transition, a process that is indicative of epithelial plasticity. Because epithelial-to-mesenchymal transition is involved in cancer, we investigated whether BMP7 plays a role in prostate cancer growth and metastasis. BMP7 expression in laser-microdissected primary human prostate cancer tissue was strongly down-regulated compared with normal prostate luminal epithelium. Furthermore, BMP7 expression in prostate cancer cell lines was inversely related to tumorigenic and metastatic potential in vivo and significantly correlated to
E-cadherin
/vimentin ratios. Exogenous addition of BMP7 to human prostate cancer cells dose-dependently inhibited transforming growth factor beta-induced activation of nuclear Smad3/4 complexes via ALK5 and induced
E-cadherin
expression. Moreover, BMP7-induced activation of nuclear Smad1/4/5 signaling transduced via BMP type I receptors was synergistically stimulated in the presence of transforming growth factor beta, a growth factor that is enriched in the bone microenvironment. Daily BMP7 administration to nude mice inhibited the growth of cancer cells in bone. In contrast, no significant growth inhibitory effect of BMP7 was observed in intraprostatic xenografts. Collectively, our observations suggest that BMP7 controls and preserves the epithelial phenotype in the human prostate and underscore a decisive role of the tumor microenvironment in mediating the therapeutic response of BMP7. Thus, BMP7 can still counteract the epithelial-to-mesenchymal transition process in the metastatic tumor, positioning BMP7 as a novel therapeutic molecule for treatment of metastatic
bone disease
.
...
PMID:BMP7, a putative regulator of epithelial homeostasis in the human prostate, is a potent inhibitor of prostate cancer bone metastasis in vivo. 1769 Jan 88
Expression of the Wnt signaling inhibitor, DKK1 by multiple myeloma cells is correlated with lytic
bone disease
in multiple myeloma. However, the mechanism(s) by which DKK1 contributes to this process is not clear. Herein, we analyzed the functional role of canonical Wnt signaling and Dkk1 inhibition of this pathway in bone morphogenic protein (BMP)-2-induced osteoblast differentiation. Osteoblast differentiation was measured by alkaline phosphatase (ALP) activity in murine (C2C12) and human pre-osteoblast (hFOB1.19) and osteoblast-like (Saos-2 and MG63) cell lines. Cytoplasmic beta-catenin protein was separated by
E-cadherin
-GST pull-down assay and analyzed by Western blotting. A dominant negative form of beta-catenin, Dkk1 and TCF reporter constructs were transfected into C2C12 cells. C2C12 cells were also transfected with siRNA specific to LRP5/6 to knockdown receptor expression. Canonical Wnt signaling was activated in these cell lines in response to Wnt3a as assessed by increased cytoplasmic, non-phosphorylated beta-catenin and TCF/LEF transcription activity. Recombinant Dkk1 and plasma from MM patients containing high levels of Dkk1 blocked Wnt3a-induced beta-catenin accumulation. Importantly, Dkk1 abrogated BMP-2 mediated osteoblast differentiation. The requirement for Wnt signaling in osteoblast differentiation was confirmed by the following observations: 1) overexpression of Dkk1 decreased endogenous beta-catenin and ALP activity; 2) silencing of Wnt receptor mRNAs blocked ALP activity; and 3) a dominant negative form of beta-catenin eliminated BMP-2-induced ALP activity. Furthermore, Wnt3a did not increase ALP activity nor did BMP-2 treatment result in beta-catenin stabilization indicating that cooperation between these two pathways is required, but they are not co-regulated by either ligand. These studies have revealed that autocrine Wnt signaling in osteoblasts is necessary to promote BMP-2-mediated differentiation of pre-osteoblast cells, while Wnt signaling alone is not capable of inducing such differentiation. Dkk1 inhibits this process and may be a key factor regulating pre-osteoblast differentiation and myeloma
bone disease
.
...
PMID:Dkk1-induced inhibition of Wnt signaling in osteoblast differentiation is an underlying mechanism of bone loss in multiple myeloma. 1829 45