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Query: UMLS:C0027651 (tumor)
685,946 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Tissue inhibitors of metalloproteinases (TIMPs) have been shown to perform several biological functions in tumor promotion, principally by their action of inhibiting matrix metalloproteinases (MMPs) at different steps of the metastatic process. In particular, TIMP-2 is involved in a functional complex with the membrane-type 1 (MT1) MMP to convert the secreted MMP-2 progelatinase into the fully active proteolytic enzyme. We used the human, androgen-sensitive prostate carcinoma cell line LNCaP in coculture with the human osteosarcoma cell line OHS to experimentally address the possibility of androgen-dependent regulatory effects on the functional MT1-MMP/TIMP-2/MMP-2 complex upon interaction between prostate carcinoma and osteoblastic cells in metastasis of prostate cancer to bone. In the LNCaP cells a gradual, time-dependent decline in TIMP-2 mRNA expression was observed in the presence of the synthetic androgen analogue R1881 (100 nM), reaching approximately 25% of the control level after 48 h of incubation. Consistent with this, the accumulation of secreted TIMP-2 in media from R1881-treated cells was significantly inhibited already after 3 h. Neither MMP-2 gelatinolytic activity nor expression of MT1-MMP was detected in LNCaP cells. In contrast, the OHS cells showed membrane-associated MT1-MMP expression as well as MMP-2 secretion. However, R1881 treatment of the LNCaP/OHS coculture model did not seem to change the overall proteolytic activity of the MT1 -MMP/TIMP-2/MMP-2 complex. Hormonal control of TIMP-2 expression in prostate carcinoma cells has not been previously reported, but whether such regulation has any functional role in the development of osteoblastic metastases in prostate cancer is still unclear.
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PMID:The metalloproteinase inhibitor TIMP-2 is down-regulated by androgens in LNCaP prostate carcinoma cells. 1459 88

Prostate cancer (PCA) is the second most frequently diagnosed and leading cause of cancer-related deaths in men in the USA. The recognition that matrix metalloproteinases (MMPs) facilitate tumor cell invasion and metastasis of PCA has led to the development of MMP inhibitors as cancer therapeutic agents. As part of our efforts to develop newer and effective chemopreventive agents for PCA, we evaluated the effect of proanthocyanidins from grape seeds (GSP) on metastasis-specific MMP-2 and -9 in human prostate carcinoma DU145 cells by employing western blot and gelatinolytic zymography. Treatment of GSP dose-dependently inhibited cell proliferation (15-100% by 5-80 microg/ml of GSP), viability (30-80% by 20-80 microg/ml of GSP) and fibroblast conditioned medium (FCM)-induced expression of MMP-2 and -9 in DU145 cells. Since the signaling cascade of mitogen-activated protein kinases (MAPK) have been shown to regulate the expression of MMPs in tumor cells, we found that the treatment of DU145 cells with GSP (20-80 microg/ml) resulted in marked inhibition of FCM-induced phosphorylation of extracellular signal regulated kinase (ERK)1/2 and p38 but had little effect on c-Jun N-terminal kinase under similar experimental conditions. GSP treatment (20-80 microg/ml) to DU145 cells also dose-dependently inhibited FCM-induced activation of NF kappa B concomitantly with inhibition of MMP-2 and -9 expression in the same system. Additionally, the treatment of inhibitors of MEK (PD98059) and p38 (SB203580) to DU145 cells resulted in the reduction of FCM-induced phosphorylation of ERK1/2 and p38 concomitantly marked reduction in MMP-2 and -9 expressions. In further studies, treatment of androgen-sensitive LNCaP cells with a synthetic androgen R1881, resulted in an increase of MMP-2 and -9, which were completely abrogated in the presence of GSP (20-60 microg/ml). These data suggest that inhibition of metastasis-specific MMPs in tumor cells by GSP is associated with the inhibition of activation of MAPK and NF kappa B pathways, and thus provides the molecular basis for the development of GSP as a novel chemopreventive agent for both androgen-sensitive and -insensitive prostate cancer therapies.
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PMID:Proanthocyanidins from grape seeds inhibit expression of matrix metalloproteinases in human prostate carcinoma cells, which is associated with the inhibition of activation of MAPK and NF kappa B. 2253 77

Androgen-regulated genes (ARGs) are essential for the development of the prostate. Ironically, ARGs are also responsible for the pathogenesis of prostate cancer. We used oligonucleotide array technology to study the expression profiles of ARGs in LNCaP prostate cancer cells and identified 692 dihydrotestosterone-regulated genes. Representative clusters containing genes with similar expression patterns to prostate-specific antigen and other known ARGs are discussed. Based on functional information, we categorized several candidate targets for prostate cancer therapy and diagnosis. Although many of these candidate targets are known to play an important role in cancer development, several are novel genes to the field of prostate cancer. A cross-comparison study of our results with those that have been previously published from three other array experiments using a similar LNCaP model validated 13 of these candidate targets as androgen-regulated. FKBP51 (FK506-binding immunophilin 51) was found in the same cluster as prostate-specific antigen and its protein expression was increased in LNCaP cells treated with either dihydrotestosterone or synthetic androgen R1881. Results from mining the Gene Logic BioExpress database showed that FKBP51 expression is significantly higher in the prostate cancer group than in the normal and normal adjacent group. Additionally, the androgen-independent prostate tumor xenograft, CWR22R, had higher FKBP51 protein levels than that of the androgen-dependent prostate tumor xenograft, CWR22. A tissue microarray study further revealed that FKBP51 protein expression was higher in prostate cancer specimens than in benign prostate tumor samples. These results suggest the potential value of FKBP51 as a novel diagnostic marker or target for prostate cancer therapy.
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PMID:Identification and validation of novel androgen-regulated genes in prostate cancer. 1513 Oct 19

The Wnt signaling pathway is aberrantly activated in many tumor types, including those of the prostate, in which beta-catenin accumulates in cell nuclei and acts as a transcriptional coregulator for the androgen receptor. Because activating mutations in the beta-catenin gene are rare in prostate cancer, we have looked for altered expression of other components of the Wnt signaling pathway in prostate cancer cells. Here we determined the expression levels of Wnt family genes in cultured human prostate cells and prostate cancer cell lines. We found that WNT11 expression is elevated in hormone-independent prostate cancer cell lines. Additional analysis indicated that WNT11 expression is also elevated in high-grade prostatic tumors and in hormone-independent xenografts. Growth of hormone-dependent LNCaP cells in hormone-depleted media led to increased WNT11 expression, which was repressed by the synthetic androgen R1881. This repression was inhibited by the antiandrogen bicalutamide, suggesting that androgens negatively regulate WNT11 expression through the androgen receptor. Expression of WNT11 inhibited androgen receptor transcriptional activity and cell growth in androgen-dependent cells but not in androgen-independent cells. WNT11 inhibited activation of the canonical Wnt pathway by WNT3A in HEK 293 cells and inhibited basal beta-catenin/Tcf transcriptional activity in LNCaP cells. However, expression of stabilized beta-catenin did not prevent the inhibition of androgen receptor transcriptional activity by WNT11. Our observations are consistent with a model in which androgen depletion activates WNT11-dependent signals that inhibit androgen-dependent but not androgen-independent cell growth.
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PMID:Analysis of Wnt gene expression in prostate cancer: mutual inhibition by WNT11 and the androgen receptor. 1552 Jan 98

New chemical entities, steroidal C-17 benzoazoles (5, 6, 9 and 10) and pyrazines (14 and 15) were rationally designed and synthesized. The key reaction for synthesis of the benzoazoles involved the nucleophilic vinylic "addition-elimination" substitution reaction of 3beta-acetoxy-17-chloro-16-formylandrosta-5,16-diene (2) and benzoazole nucleophiles, while that for synthesis of pyrazines involved palladium-catalyzed cross-coupling reaction of 17-iodoandrosta-5,16-dien-3beta-ol (13) with tributylstannyl diazines. Some of the compounds were shown to be potent inhibitors of human CYP17 enzyme as well as potent antagonist of both wild type and mutant androgen receptors (AR). The most potent CYP17 inhibitors were 3beta-hydroxy-17-(1H-benzimidazole-1-yl)androsta-5,16-diene (5, code named VN/124-1), 3beta-hydroxy-17-(5(1)-pyrimidyl)androsta-5,16-diene (15) and 17-(1H-benzimidazole-1-yl)androsta-4,16-dien-3-one (6), with IC(50) values of 300, 500 and 915 nM, respectively. Compounds 5, 6, 14 and 15 were effective at preventing binding of (3)H-R1881 (methyltrienolone, a stable synthetic androgen) to both the mutant LNCaP AR and the wild-type AR, but with a 2.2- to 5-fold higher binding efficiency to the latter. Compounds 5 and 6 were also shown to be potent pure AR antagonists. The cell growth studies showed that 5 and 6 inhibit the growth of DHT-stimulated LNCaP and LAPC4 prostate cancer cells with IC(50) values in the low micromolar range (i.e., <10 microM). Their inhibitory potencies were comparable to that of casodex but remarkably superior to that of flutamide. The pharmacokinetics of compounds 5 and 6 in mice were investigated. Following s.c. administration of 50 mg/kg of 5 and 6, peak plasma levels of 16.82 and 5.15 ng/mL, respectively, occurred after 30 to 60 min, both compounds were cleared rapidly from plasma (terminal half-lives of 44.17 and 39.93 min, respectively), and neither was detectable at 8 h. Remarkably, compound 5 was rapidly converted into a metabolite tentatively identified as 17-(1H-benzimidazol-1-yl)androsta-3-one. When tested in vivo, 5 proved to be very effective at inhibiting the growth of androgen-dependent LAPC4 human prostate tumor xenograft, while 6 was ineffective. Compound 5 (50 mg/kg/twice daily) resulted in a 93.8% reduction (P = 0.00065) in the mean final tumor volume compared with controls, and it was also significantly more effective than castration. To our knowledge, this is the first example of an antihormonal agent (an inhibitor of androgen synthesis (CYP17 inhibitor)/antiandrogen) that is significantly more effective than castration in suppression of androgen-dependent prostate tumor growth. In view of these impressive anticancer properties, compound 5 is a strong candidate for development for the treatment of human prostate cancer.
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PMID:Novel C-17-heteroaryl steroidal CYP17 inhibitors/antiandrogens: synthesis, in vitro biological activity, pharmacokinetics, and antitumor activity in the LAPC4 human prostate cancer xenograft model. 1582 36

Recent studies show that prostate cancer cells are able to survive in a hypoxic tumor environment, and the extent of tumor hypoxia correlates with poor clinical outcome. Androgen deprivation, the most common form of prostate cancer therapy, was itself shown to induce a state of transient hypoxia at the microenvironmental level. Because androgen receptor (AR) signaling plays a critical role in prostate cancer, we investigated the effect of hypoxia in regulating AR function. We found that in LNCaP prostate cancer cells, AR binding to the androgen-responsive element (ARE), prostate-specific antigen accumulation, and ARE-reporter gene activity were increased after hypoxia treatment. Hypoxia-enhanced AR function was also observed when AR was exogenously introduced into AR-null DU145 cells. Confocal microscopy and chromatin immunoprecipitation assays showed that AR translocation to the nucleus and AR recruitment to the prostate-specific antigen promoter were facilitated after hypoxia treatment. The AR stimulatory effect seemed to be ligand-dependent because it was abrogated when cells were cultured in an androgen-depleted medium, but was restored with the addition of R1881, a synthetic androgen. The sensitivity of AR activation to R1881 was also increased after hypoxia treatment. Although concentrations of <1 nmol/L R1881 did not induce ARE reporter activity under normoxic conditions, exposure to hypoxia greatly potentiated the AR response to low levels of R1881. Collectively, our results provide compelling evidence that changes in hypoxia/reoxygenation stimulate AR trans-activation and sensitization. The AR-stimulatory effect of an unstable tissue oxygenation milieu of a tumor is likely to contribute to treatment resistance and the emergence of recurrent prostate cancer.
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PMID:Hypoxia increases androgen receptor activity in prostate cancer cells. 1670 35

Hinokitiol (beta-thujaplicin), a troplone-related compound found in the heartwood of cupressaceous plants, strongly inhibits the proliferation of a broad range of tumor cell lines. This is the first report to demonstrate that hinokitiol, a metal chelator derived from natural plants, suppresses cell growth and disrupts AR signaling in prostate carcinoma cell lines. Our present studies indicate that hinokitiol suppresses androgen/AR-mediated cell growth and androgen-stimulated DNA synthesis by [(3)H]thymidine incorporation in a dose- and time-dependent manner. Hinokitiol simultaneously suppresses the intracellular and secreted PSA levels, a marker for the progression of prostate cancer. Hinokitiol significantly represses the AR mRNA and protein expression in a dose- and time-dependent manner. Additionally, the ligand-binding assay shows that hinokitiol blocks binding of the synthetic androgen [(3)H]R1881 to AR in LNCaP cells. These findings collectively suggest that hinokitiol is potentially effective against prostate cancer in vitro, and thus it might become a novel chemopreventive or chemotherapeutic agent for prostate cancer.
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PMID:Hinokitiol, a metal chelator derived from natural plants, suppresses cell growth and disrupts androgen receptor signaling in prostate carcinoma cell lines. 1705 55

We previously reported the selective loss of AKR1C2 and AKR1C1 in prostate cancers compared with their expression in paired benign tissues. We now report that dihydrotestosterone (DHT) levels are significantly greater in prostate cancer tumors compared with their paired benign tissues. Decreased catabolism seems to account for the increased DHT levels as expression of AKR1C2 and SRD5A2 was reduced in these tumors compared with their paired benign tissues. After 4 h of incubation with benign tissue samples, (3)H-DHT was predominantly catabolized to the 5alpha-androstane-3alpha,17beta-diol metabolite. Reduced capacity to metabolize DHT was observed in tumor samples from four of five freshly isolated pairs of tissue samples, which paralleled loss of AKR1C2 and AKR1C1 expression. LAPC-4 cells transiently transfected with AKR1C1 and AKR1C2, but not AKR1C3, were able to significantly inhibit a dose-dependent, DHT-stimulated proliferation, which was associated with a significant reduction in the concentration of DHT remaining in the media. R1881-stimulated proliferation was equivalent in all transfected cells, showing that metabolism of DHT was responsible for the inhibition of proliferation. PC-3 cells overexpressing AKR1C2 and, to a lesser extent, AKR1C1 were able to significantly inhibit DHT-dependent androgen receptor reporter activity, which was abrogated by increasing DHT levels. We speculate that selective loss of AKR1C2 in prostate cancer promotes clonal expansion of tumor cells by enhancement of androgen-dependent cellular proliferation by reducing DHT metabolism.
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PMID:Impaired dihydrotestosterone catabolism in human prostate cancer: critical role of AKR1C2 as a pre-receptor regulator of androgen receptor signaling. 1728 74

To identify physiologically relevant WT1 transcriptional target genes in prostate cancer cells, we have established stably transfected LNCaP cell lines expressing either WT1(A), its mutant counterpart DDS(R384W), or vector control. Microarray analyses of these cells revealed that vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) was differentially expressed in the engineered lines. Regulation of VEGF by WT1 likely contributes to kidney angiogenesis during development and WT1 mutants such as DDS(R384W) are associated with the Denys-Drash syndrome (DDS), characterized by renal abnormalities. Recent mechanistic studies have demonstrated that the WT1(A) isoform binds VEGF promoter sequences and transcriptionally regulates VEGF reporter constructs. However, regulation of VEGF is complex, involving both transcriptional and post-transcriptional processes. This study examined the ability of hormone and Actinomycin D treatment to alter VEGF mRNA levels in stably transfected WT-LNCaP, DDS-LNCaP, or V-LNCaP prostate cancer cells. The rationale of this study was based on a previous finding that enhancement of VEGF expression in DDS-LNCaP cells occurred only in the presence of the androgen analog, R1881. One possible explanation for these results was that DDS-WT1 stabilized VEGF mRNA so that it accumulated to higher levels. This hypothesis was tested by treating engineered LNCaP cells with Actinomycin D (Act D) and then measuring VEGF mRNA levels by quantitative real-time PCR. The combined effects of WT1 or DDS(R384W) and hormone were tested in these message stability assays and also in transcription assays of transiently transfected LNCaP cells. The results indicated that DDS-WT1 is unable to regulate VEGF transcription or stabilize VEGF mRNA in LNCaP prostate cancer cells. However our observations are also consistent with wild-type WT1(A) having both transcriptional and post-transcriptional effects on VEGF mRNA levels in the presence of hormone. These studies of VEGF regulation by WT1 and dysregulation by DDS(R384W) suggest an important role for WT1 in both normal and tumor-related angiogenesis.
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PMID:VEGF transcription and mRNA stability are altered by WT1 not DDS(R384W) expression in LNCaP cells. 1748 99

The purpose of this study was to understand the characteristics of prostate-derived Ets factor (PDEF) protein expression in breast and prostate cancer progression. A polyclonal antibody specific to PDEF was raised and reacted with tissue microarrays consisting of benign breast, in situ ductal, invasive ductal, and invasive lobular breast carcinomas. The antibody was also reacted with tissue microarrays, including benign prostate, prostate intraepithelial neoplasias (PINs), and prostate carcinomas. Increased expression of PDEF was identified in 18%, 50%, 46%, and 51% of benign breast tissues, intraductal, invasive ductal, and invasive lobular carcinomas, respectively. Importantly, in matched samples of benign breast vs tumor, 90% showed higher expression of PDEF in the tumor tissue. Moreover, in invasive breast carcinomas, increased PDEF expression tended to correlate with Her2/neu overexpression. Increased expression of PDEF was also found in 27%, 33%, and 40% of benign prostate tissues, PIN samples, and prostate adenocarcinomas, respectively. Again, in matching samples of cancer vs benign and cancer vs PIN, 68% and 70%, respectively, showed increased expression in the malignant tissue. Moreover, PDEF was found to be more highly expressed in tumors with intermediate or high Gleason score compared with low-grade tumors (P < .01). In addition, R1881 treatment induced PDEF expression in the LNCaP prostate tumor cell line, suggesting regulation of PDEF by androgens in vivo. Together, these results for the first time show frequent increased expression of PDEF protein in breast and prostate tumors and support a role for PDEF in breast and prostate cancer progression.
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PMID:Expression characteristics of prostate-derived Ets factor support a role in breast and prostate cancer progression. 1752 1


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