Androgen-Sensitized Apoptosis of HPr-1AR Human Prostate Epithelial Cells

被引:1
作者
Chen, Congcong [1 ]
Dienhart, Jason A. [1 ]
Bolton, Eric C. [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Illinois, Dept Mol & Integrat Physiol, Urbana, IL USA
来源
PLOS ONE | 2016年 / 11卷 / 05期
关键词
CANCER CELLS; HYDROGEN-PEROXIDE; RECEPTOR ACTIVATION; SIGNALING PATHWAYS; DOWN-REGULATION; PROTEIN-KINASE; DEATH PATHWAY; BASAL-CELLS; STEM-CELLS; GENE;
D O I
10.1371/journal.pone.0156145
中图分类号
O [数理科学和化学]; P [天文学、地球科学]; Q [生物科学]; N [自然科学总论];
学科分类号
07 ; 0710 ; 09 ;
摘要
Androgen receptor (AR) signaling is crucial to the development and homeostasis of the prostate gland, and its dysregulation mediates common prostate pathologies. The mechanisms whereby AR regulates growth suppression and differentiation of luminal epithelial cells in the prostate gland and proliferation of malignant versions of these cells have been investigated in human and rodent adult prostate. However, the cellular stress response of human prostate epithelial cells is not well understood, though it is central to prostate health and pathology. Here, we report that androgen sensitizes HPr-1AR and RWPE-AR human prostate epithelial cells to cell stress agents and apoptotic cell death. Although 5 alpha-dihydrotestosterone (DHT) treatment alone did not induce cell death, co-treatment of HPr-1AR cells with DHT and an apoptosis inducer, such as staurosporine (STS), TNFt, or hydrogen peroxide, synergistically increased cell death in comparison to treatment with each apoptosis inducer by itself. We found that the synergy between DHT and apoptosis inducer led to activation of the intrinsic/mitochondrial apoptotic pathway, which is supported by robust cleavage activation of caspase-9 and caspase-3. Further, the dramatic depolarization of the mitochondrial membrane potential that we observed upon co-treatment with DHT and STS is consistent with increased mitochondrial outer membrane permeabilization (MOMP) in the pro-apoptotic mechanism. Interestingly, the synergy between DHT and apoptosis inducer was abolished by AR antagonists and inhibitors of transcription and protein synthesis, suggesting that AR mediates pro-apoptotic synergy through transcriptional regulation of MOMP genes. Expression analysis revealed that pro-apoptotic genes (BCL2L11/BIM and AIFM2) were DHT-induced, whereas pro-survival genes (BCL2L1/BCL-XL and MCL1) were DHT-repressed. Hence, we propose that the net effect of these AR-mediated expression changes shifts the balance of BCL2-family proteins, such that androgen signaling sensitizes mitochondria to apoptotic signaling, thus rendering HPr-1AR more vulnerable to cell death signals. Our study offers insight into AR-mediated regulation of prostate epithelial cell death signaling.
引用
收藏
页数:24
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [31] The Role of Oxidative Stress in Apoptosis and Cell Proliferation of Human Bronchial Epithelial Cells
    Ecevit, Hasret
    Urhan-Kucuk, Meral
    Uluca, Haluk
    Tap, Duygu
    Arpaci, Abdullah
    CYTOLOGY AND GENETICS, 2021, 55 (03) : 283 - 289
  • [32] Sorafenib decreases proliferation and induces apoptosis of prostate cancer cells by inhibition of the androgen receptor and Akt signaling pathways
    Oh, Su Jung
    Erb, Holger H. H.
    Hobisch, Alfred
    Santer, Frederic R.
    Culig, Zoran
    ENDOCRINE-RELATED CANCER, 2012, 19 (03) : 305 - 319
  • [33] N-Myc Drives Neuroendocrine Prostate Cancer Initiated from Human Prostate Epithelial Cells
    Lee, John K.
    Phillips, John W.
    Smith, Bryan A.
    Park, Jung Wook
    Stoyanova, Tanya
    McCaffrey, Erin F.
    Baertsch, Robert
    Sokolov, Artem
    Meyerowitz, Justin G.
    Mathis, Colleen
    Cheng, Donghui
    Stuart, Joshua M.
    Shokat, Kevan M.
    Gustafson, W. Clay
    Huang, Jiaoti
    Witte, Owen N.
    CANCER CELL, 2016, 29 (04) : 536 - 547
  • [34] RUNX1, an androgen- and EZH2-regulated gene, has differential roles in AR-dependent and -independent prostate cancer
    Takayama, Ken-ichi
    Suzuki, Takashi
    Tsutsumi, Shuichi
    Fujimura, Tetsuya
    Urano, Tomohiko
    Takahashi, Satoru
    Homma, Yukio
    Aburatani, Hiroyuki
    Inoue, Satoshi
    ONCOTARGET, 2015, 6 (04) : 2263 - 2276
  • [35] Purification and direct transformation of epithelial progenitor cells from primary human prostate
    Goldstein, Andrew S.
    Drake, Justin M.
    Burnes, Daina L.
    Finley, David S.
    Zhang, Hong
    Reiter, Robert E.
    Huang, Jiaoti
    Witte, Owen N.
    NATURE PROTOCOLS, 2011, 6 (05) : 656 - 667
  • [36] Peroxisome Proliferator-Activated Receptor γ Coactivator-1α Interacts with the Androgen Receptor (AR) and Promotes Prostate Cancer Cell Growth by Activating the AR
    Shiota, Masaki
    Yokomizo, Akira
    Tada, Yasuhiro
    Inokuchi, Junichi
    Tatsugami, Katsunori
    Kuroiwa, Kentaro
    Uchiumi, Takeshi
    Fujimoto, Naohiro
    Seki, Narihito
    Naito, Seiji
    MOLECULAR ENDOCRINOLOGY, 2010, 24 (01) : 114 - 127
  • [37] Regulation of heat shock protein 70-1 expression by androgen receptor and its signaling in human prostate cancer cells
    Lu, Shan
    Tan, Zongqin
    Wortman, Matt
    Lu, Shan
    Dong, Zhongyun
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF ONCOLOGY, 2010, 36 (02) : 459 - 467
  • [38] Characterization of the androgen receptor in a benign prostate tissue-derived human prostate epithelial cell line: RC-165N/human telomerase reverse transcriptase
    Kim, K-H
    Dobi, A.
    Shaheduzzaman, S.
    Gao, C. L.
    Masuda, K.
    Li, H.
    Drukier, A.
    Gu, Y.
    Srikantan, V.
    Rhim, J. S.
    Srivastava, S.
    PROSTATE CANCER AND PROSTATIC DISEASES, 2007, 10 (01) : 30 - 38
  • [39] E-cadherin-mediated survival of androgen-receptor-expressing secretory prostate epithelial cells derived from a stratified in vitro differentiation model
    Lamb, Laura E.
    Knudsen, Beatrice S.
    Miranti, Cindy K.
    JOURNAL OF CELL SCIENCE, 2010, 123 (02) : 266 - 276
  • [40] Jagged1 upregulation in prostate epithelial cells promotes formation of reactive stroma in the Pten null mouse model for prostate cancer
    Su, Q.
    Zhang, B.
    Zhang, L.
    Dang, T.
    Rowley, D.
    Ittmann, M.
    Xin, L.
    ONCOGENE, 2017, 36 (05) : 618 - 627