Aberrant expression of extracellular signal-regulated kinase 5 in human prostate cancer

被引:0
|
作者
S R C McCracken
A Ramsay
R Heer
M E Mathers
B L Jenkins
J Edwards
C N Robson
R Marquez
P Cohen
H Y Leung
机构
[1] Urology Research Group,Division of Cancer Sciences and Molecular Pathology
[2] Northern Institute for Cancer Research,Department of Cellular Pathology
[3] University of Newcastle,undefined
[4] Cancer Research UK Laboratories,undefined
[5] Beatson Institute for Cancer Research,undefined
[6] Section of Surgical and Translational Research,undefined
[7] University of Glasgow,undefined
[8] Royal Victoria Infirmary,undefined
[9] Medical Research Council Protein Phosphorylation Unit,undefined
[10] School of Life Sciences,undefined
[11] University of Dundee,undefined
来源
Oncogene | 2008年 / 27卷
关键词
prostate cancer; ERK5; MEK5;
D O I
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中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Abnormal intracellular signaling contributes to carcinogenesis and may represent novel therapeutic targets. mitogen/extracellular signal-regulated kinase kinase-5 (MEK5) overexpression is associated with aggressive prostate cancer. In this study, we examined the role of extracellular signal-regulated kinase (ERK5, an MAPK and specific substrate for MEK5) in prostate cancer. ERK5 immunoreactivity was significantly upregulated in high-grade prostate cancer when compared to benign prostatic hyperplasia (P<0.0001). Increased ERK5 cytoplasmic signals correlated closely with Gleason sum score (P<0.0001), bony metastases (P=0.0044) and locally advanced disease at diagnosis (P=0.0023), with a weak association with shorter disease-specific survival (P=0.036). A subgroup of patients showed strong nuclear ERK5 localization, which correlated with poor disease-specific survival and, on multivariant analysis, was an independent prognostic factor (P<0.0001). Analysis of ERK5 expression in matched tumor pairs (before and after hormone relapse, n=26) revealed ERK5 nuclear expression was significantly associated with hormone-insensitive disease (P=0.0078). Similarly, ERK5 protein expression was increased in an androgen-independent LNCaP subline. We obtained the following in vitro and in vivo evidence to support the above expression data: (1) cotransfection of ERK5wt and MEK5D constructs in PC3 cells results in predominant ERK5 nuclear localization, similar to that observed in aggressive clinical disease; (2) ERK5-overexpressing PC3 cells have enhanced proliferative, migrative and invasive capabilities in vitro (P<0.0001), and were dramatically more efficient in forming tumors, with a shorter mean time for tumors to reach a critical volume of 1000 mm3, in vivo (P<0.0001); (3) the MEK1 inhibitor, PD184352, blocking ERK1/2 activation at low dose, did not suppress proliferation but did significantly decrease proliferation at a higher dose required to inhibit ERK5 activation. Taken together, our results establish the potential importance of ERK5 in aggressive prostate cancer.
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页码:2978 / 2988
页数:10
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