Role of neurotrophins and neurotrophin receptors in the in vitro invasion and heparanase production of human prostate cancer cells

被引:0
作者
E. Timothy Walch
Dario Marchetti
机构
[1] The University of Texas M. D. Anderson Cancer Center,Section of Molecular Cell Biology, department of Cancer Biology
来源
Clinical & Experimental Metastasis | 1999年 / 17卷
关键词
heparanase; invasion; neurotrophins; prostate cancer; p75 neurotrophin receptor (p75; );
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
The role of the neurotrophins (NTs) and their corresponding receptors (NTRs) TrkA, TrkB, TrkC, and p75NTR in neoplasia has received relatively little attention. However, because malignant cell migration within the prostate occurs predominantly by direct extension around prostatic nerves, the presence and possible upregulation of NTs from autocrine/paracrine sources and NTR expression within prostate epithelial tumor cells may be important in metastasis. We have been addressing their expression and interactions in human prostate cancer cell lines (LNCaP, PC-3, and DU145) and their role in prostate cancer invasion. In this study, we demonstrated that nerve growth factor (NGF), the prototypic NT, and NT-4/5 increased in vitro invasion through a reconstituted basement membrane and induced time- and dose-dependent expression of heparanase, a heparan sulfate-specific endo-β-d-glucuronidase, an important molecular determinant of tumor metastasis. The NT effects were most marked in the DU145 brain-metastatic cells and were detected at NT concentrations sufficient to fully saturate both low- and high-affinity NTRs. Additionally, we characterized the molecular expression of NT high-affinity (Trk) and low-affinity (p75NTR) receptors in these cell lines by reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction. These lines had negligible trkA and trkC expression, although trkB was expressed in the three prostatic tumor cell lines examined. The brain-metastatic DU145 cells were also positive for p75NTR. Our data showed that the NTs and NTRs are important in metastasis and that their expression coincides with transformation to a malignant phenotype capable of invasion along the perineural space and extracapsular metastasis to distant sites. These findings set the stage for more research into this area as related to prostate cancer evolution and may improve therapy for prostate cancer metastasis.
引用
收藏
页码:307 / 314
页数:7
相关论文
共 161 条
[1]  
Carter HB(1990)The prostate: an increasing medical problem Prostate 16 39-48
[2]  
Coffey DS.(1980)The role of androgens in epithelio-mesenchymal interactionsinvolved in prostatic morphogenesis in embryonic mice Anat Rec 175 87-96
[3]  
Cunha GR.(1980)Stromal-epithelial interactions in sex differentiation Biol Reprod 22 19-42
[4]  
Cunha GR(1983)Stromal-epithelial interactions: II. Regulation of prostatic growth by embryonic urogenital sinus mesenchyme Prostate 4 503-11
[5]  
Chung LWK(1986)Whole autoradiography study of DNA synthetic activity during postnatal development and induced regeneration in the mouse prostate Biol Reprod 34 985-95
[6]  
Shannon JM(1985)Regional differences in the inductive activity of the mesenchyme of the embryonic mouse urogenital sinus Prostate 7 253-60
[7]  
Reese BA.(1991)Regulation of growth by a nerve growth factor-like protein which modulates paracrine interactions between a neoplastic epithelial cell line and stromal cells of the human prostate Cancer Res 51 3304-10
[8]  
Chung GR(1979)Guinea pig prostate is a rich source of nerve growth factor Nature 279 160-3
[9]  
Cunha GR.(1980)The purification of nerve growth factor from bovine seminal plasma J Neurochem 34 893-903
[10]  
Sugimura Y(1992)Distribution of nerve growth factor-like protein and nerve growth factor receptor in human benign prostatic hyperplasia and prostatic adenocarcinoma J Urol 147 1444-7