Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: UMLS:C0178874 (
tumor progression
)
40,807
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Dynamic modulation of information flow within signaling networks allows the cell to respond to micro-environmental changes. This property of the cell, while being essential to survival and eliciting appropriate responses, can also be detrimental to the organism by allowing cancerous cells to evade regulation and proliferate. We determined if changes in expression levels of transcriptional regulators and their interactions could alter routing within signaling networks in prostate cancer cells. Increasing the protein levels of the signal transducer and activator of transcription 3 (Stat3) led to Stat3-
androgen receptor
(AR) complex formation in response to epidermal growth factor (EGF) and interleukin-6 (IL-6) stimulation. Increasing the protein levels of Stat3 increased the EGF induced transcriptional activation of the
androgen receptor
. Androgen pre-treatment increased Stat3 protein levels in an IL-6 autocrine/paracrine dependent manner in the cells suggesting a feedback loop within cells. Increased Stat3-AR complex leads to a change in the routing of the epidermal growth factor signal allowing the
androgen receptor
to become activated in a Stat3 dependent manner. Understanding interactions and changes in signal flow within the cell is important to our understanding of signaling networks as well as our ability to identify cellular targets for novel therapies to inhibit
cancer progression
.
...
PMID:An androgen-IL-6-Stat3 autocrine loop re-routes EGF signal in prostate cancer cells. 1737 39
Because of the importance of androgens to prostate cancer (PCa) development, several candidate genes along androgen pathway have been under intensive study. Given the role of the molecular chaperone HSP70 in the regulation of the
androgen receptor
(AR) transactivation function, we first chose to explore the association between the HSP70-hom functional genetic variant (+2437 T > C) and prostate cancer risk by genotyping DNA samples from 101 unselected PCa patients and 105 healthy men. There was a trend towards lower frequency of TC and CC genotypes among patients when compared with healthy controls, however the difference did not reach the statistical significance (TC genotype: OR = 0.53, P = 0.05; CC genotype: OR = 0.42, P = 0.16). Moreover, individuals carrying at least one C allele have a statistically significant lower susceptibility for PCa (OR = 0.51 (0.26-0.97); P = 0.02). Since some factors may influence
tumor progression
rather than initiation, we also examined the relationship between the HSP70-hom polymorphism and the clinical characteristics of the malignancy at the time of diagnosis. The stratified analysis of the genotypes with the clinical stage and tumor grade showed that there was no significant difference in the risk estimates according to prognostic indicators of PCa disease in our population study. This is the first report on the studies of HSP70 SNPs in PCa and our data suggest that this genetic variant may be a genetic marker for PCa susceptibility in Tunisians.
...
PMID:Association of HSP70-hom genetic variant with prostate cancer risk. 1757 80
PTEN mutations are among the most frequent genetic alterations found in human prostate cancers. Our previous works suggest that although precancerous lesions were found in Pten heterozygous mice,
cancer progression
and metastasis only happened when both alleles of Pten were deleted. To understand the molecular mechanisms underlying the role of PTEN in prostate cancer control, we generated two pairs of isogenic,
androgen receptor
(AR)-positive prostate epithelial lines from intact conditional Pten knock-out mice that are either heterozygous (PTEN-P2 and -P8) or homozygous (PTEN-CaP2 and PTEN-CaP8) for Pten deletion. Further characterization of these cells showed that loss of the second allele of Pten leads to increased anchorage-independent growth in vitro and tumorigenesis in vivo without obvious structural or numerical chromosome changes based on SKY karyotyping analysis. Despite no prior exposure to hormone ablation therapy, Pten null cells are tumorigenic in both male and female severe combined immunodeficiency mice. Furthermore, knocking down PTEN can convert the androgen-dependent Myc-CaP cell into androgen independence, suggesting that PTEN intrinsically controls androgen responsiveness, a critical step in the development of hormone refractory prostate cancer. Importantly, knocking down AR by shRNA in Pten null cells reverses androgen-independent growth in vitro and partially inhibited tumorigenesis in vivo, indicating that PTEN-controlled prostate tumorigenesis is AR dependent. These cell lines will serve as useful tools for understanding signaling pathways controlled by PTEN and elucidating the molecular mechanisms involved in hormone refractory prostate cancer formation.
...
PMID:Murine cell lines derived from Pten null prostate cancer show the critical role of PTEN in hormone refractory prostate cancer development. 1761 63
We propose and evaluate the hypothesis that the CAG repeat region of the
androgen receptor
represents a locus of antagonistic pleiotropy in the context of sexual selection and sexual conflict. Short repeats are associated with increased transactivation of the
androgen receptor
at the molecular level, and increased fertility at the phenotypic level. However, short repeats are also associated with increased risk of prostate cancer, and with more aggressive forms of the disease. The somatic evolution of cancer cell lineages also shows a repeated pattern of shortening of the CAG repeat in association with
cancer progression
, apparently as a result of positive selection among cell lineages. We further postulate that other genes associated with prostate cancer are likely to mediate antagonistic pleiotropy in the context of sexual selection and sexual conflict. A key prediction of this hypothesis is that the genes mediating antagonistic pleiotropy will show historical evidence of positive selection, particularly in the context of sexual conflict. Previous research on the molecular evolution of specific genes associated with prostate cancer supports this prediction, and we suggest further critical tests of the role for genomic conflicts and tradeoffs in the evolution of cancer risk.
...
PMID:The androgen receptor and prostate cancer: a role for sexual selection and sexual conflict? 1765 31
The
androgen receptor
(AR) mediates the physiologic and pathophysiologic effects of androgens including sexual differentiation, prostate development, and
cancer progression
by binding to genomic androgen response elements (AREs), which influence transcription of AR target genes. The composition and context of AREs differ between genes, thus enabling AR to confer multiple regulatory functions within a single nucleus. We used expression profiling of an immortalized human prostate epithelial cell line to identify 205 androgen-responsive genes (ARGs), most of them novel. In addition, we performed chromatin immunoprecipitation to identify 524 AR binding regions and validated in reporter assays the ARE activities of several such regions. Interestingly, 67% of our AREs resided within approximately 50 kb of the transcription start sites of 84% of our ARGs. Indeed, most ARGs were associated with two or more AREs, and ARGs were sometimes themselves linked in gene clusters containing up to 13 AREs and 12 ARGs. AREs appeared typically to be composite elements, containing AR binding sequences adjacent to binding motifs for other transcriptional regulators. Functionally, ARGs were commonly involved in prostate cell proliferation, communication, differentiation, and possibly
cancer progression
. Our results provide new insights into cell- and gene-specific mechanisms of transcriptional regulation of androgen-responsive gene networks.
...
PMID:Cell- and gene-specific regulation of primary target genes by the androgen receptor. 1769 49
Prostate carcinomas frequently express estrogen receptors (ER), irrespective of
androgen receptor
(AR) expression; however, the role of ERs and estrogens in prostate cancer is controversial. We found that 17beta-estradiol (E(2)) is able to markedly up-regulate insulin-like growth factor (IGF)-I receptor (IGF-IR) mRNA and protein expression in both AR-positive (LNCaP cells) and AR-negative (PC-3 cells) prostate cancer cells. This effect occurs not only via ERalpha but also via ERbeta stimulation and is specific for IGF-IR because it does not involve the cognate insulin receptor. IGF-IR up-regulation is associated with increased IGF-IR phosphorylation and with increased mitogenic and motogenic activities in response to IGF-I. IGF-IR up-regulation by E(2) does not require ER binding to DNA and is poorly sensitive to antiestrogen blockade, whereas it is associated with the activation of cytosolic kinase cascades involving Src, extracellular signal-regulated kinase (ERK)-1/2, and, to a lesser extent, phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase and is sensitive to the inhibition of these kinases. In conclusion, our data indicate that estrogens may contribute to IGF system deregulation in prostate cancer through the activation of a nongenotropic pathway. Estrogens may have a role, therefore, in
tumor progression
to androgen independence. Inhibition of the IGF-IR or the Src-ERK pathway should be considered, therefore, as an adjuvant therapy in prostate cancer.
...
PMID:17beta-estradiol up-regulates the insulin-like growth factor receptor through a nongenotropic pathway in prostate cancer cells. 1787 36
Dysregulation of the
androgen receptor
(AR) and its signaling in the prostate often occurs during normal aging or after androgen ablation, consequently leading to the development of hormone-refractory prostate cancer (HRPC). Hyaluronan (HA) plays an important role in this transformation of androgen-independent cancer. Previous studies have shown that activation of the receptor for hyaluronan-mediated motility, CD168, was correlated with the Gleason's score, cancer stage, transformation and metastasis in >90% of HRPC patients. However, the relationship between loss of AR dependency and HA-mediated CD168 signaling remains unclear. We report here that AR regulates normal CD168 expression and its downstream signaling in androgen-dependent (AD) prostatic epithelial cell lines. Furthermore, we observed that the concurrent treatments of HA and dihydrotestosterone (DHT), a native androgen, significantly promoted the tumorigenicity of AD prostate cancer cell lines, which showed elevated rates of cell proliferation, invasion and metastasis to the human bone marrow endothelial cell layer. Inhibition of CD168 downstream Rho-activated protein kinases completely prevented this type of tumorigenicity. These findings suggest that the interaction of androgen and AR is essential for regulating HA-mediated
cancer progression
via the CD168/ROCK signal transduction pathway and also indicate that the loss of AR regulation not only causes CD168 overexpression but it also activates HA-mediated CD168 signaling in malignant
cancer progression
and metastasis of HRPC.
...
PMID:Androgen receptor regulates CD168 expression and signaling in prostate cancer. 1817 58
A cascade of epigenetic events contributes to the selective growth advantage of cancer cells during
tumor progression
. PMEPA1 gene is an androgen-inducible negative regulator of cell growth in the prostate epithelium. During prostate cancer progression PMEPA1 gene transcription is reduced or lost prompting us to investigate the role of epigenetic events in this process. In LAPC4 cells harboring wild type
androgen receptor
decitabine (5-aza-2'-deoxycitidine) treatment resulted in increased expression of PMEPA1 along with other androgen-inducible genes, suggesting a role for DNA methylation in the repression of androgenic cell growth control signals in prostate cancer. In contrast, mutant
androgen receptor
expressing LNCaP cells were deficient in this response. Therefore, decitabine-induced expression of cell growth controlling genes such as NKX3.1 or PMEPA1 underlines the clinical applicability of decitabine in prostate tumors harboring wild type
androgen receptor
. Further analysis of DNA methylation within the PMEPA1 promoter downstream sequences suggests that methylation of SP1 binding sites may also contribute to the repression of PMEPA1 gene.
...
PMID:A role for DNA methylation in regulating the growth suppressor PMEPA1 gene in prostate cancer. 1817 52
Prostate cancer is one of the most prominent malignancies of elderly men in many Western countries including Europe and the United States with increasing trend worldwide. The growth of normal prostate as well as of prostate carcinoma cells depends on functional
androgen receptor
(AR) signaling. AR manifests the biological actions of androgens and its transcriptional activity is known to be influenced by signal transduction pathways. Here we show that Src, a nonreceptor tyrosine kinase, is overexpressed in androgen-independent prostate carcinoma C4-2 cells. Interestingly, the expression of Src was found to progressively increase (up to threefold) in transgenic adenocarcinoma of mouse prostate mice as a function of age and
cancer progression
. Blocking Src kinase function by a specific inhibitor, PP2, resulted in decreased AR transactivation function on two different reporters, mouse mammary tumor virus (MMTV) and prostate-specific antigen (PSA). Consistent with this, overexpression of a functional Src mutant also led to a dramatic decrease in AR transactivation potential in a hormone-dependent manner. Interference with Src function in C4-2 cells led to decreased recruitment of AR on the target gene PSA enhancer and also resulted in the abrogation of hormone-dependent PSA transcript induction. Src inhibition also led to a dramatic decrease in the cell invasion in addition to decreasing the cellular growth. We suggest that targeting Src kinase could be an effective strategy to inhibit prostate cancer growth and metastasis.
...
PMID:Src kinase potentiates androgen receptor transactivation function and invasion of androgen-independent prostate cancer C4-2 cells. 1822 92
Activation of
androgen receptor
(AR) stimulates the growth of not only androgen-dependent but also of androgen-refractory prostate cancer. However, neither the role of AR in invasion/metastasis nor the relationship between invasiveness and androgen-refractory status has been established. In this study, we used the androgen-dependent prostate cancer cell line MDA PCa 2b, derived from a human bone metastasis, to generate an invasive subline (MDA-I) using a Matrigel chamber. MDA-I cells expressed higher levels of AR and prostate-specific antigen than their less invasive parental cells. Blocking AR function or removal of androgen suppressed the invasion of MDA-I cells, whereas stimulating AR increased invasion. In addition, forced AR overexpression increased the invasiveness of MDA PCa 2b cells. Next, we showed that an androgen-refractory subline (MDA-hr) of MDA PCa 2b cells also expressed higher levels of AR and were more invasive than their parental androgen-dependent cells. Blocking AR function suppressed the invasiveness of MDA-hr cells. Gelatin zymography indicated that matrix metalloproteinase 2 (MMP-2) and MMP-9 activities were regulated by AR signaling and closely correlated with the invasiveness of the androgen-dependent and androgen-refractory prostate cancer cells. These data suggest that AR promotes the invasiveness of both androgen-dependent and androgen-refractory prostate cancer and that a more invasive phenotype might develop through AR activation during
cancer progression
. These findings potentially support the use of adjuvant hormonal therapy and the future development of more potent androgen blockade therapy.
...
PMID:Androgen receptor and invasion in prostate cancer. 1828 88
<< Previous
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
Next >>