Literature DB >> 12547719

A urokinase-derived peptide (A6) increases survival of mice bearing orthotopically grown prostate cancer and reduces lymph node metastasis.

Douglas D Boyd1, Sun-Jin Kim, Heng Wang, Terence R Jones, Gary E Gallick.   

Abstract

The high rate of prostate cancer mortality invariably reflects the inability to control the spread of the disease. The urokinase-type plasminogen activator and its receptor (u-PAR) contribute to prostate cancer metastases by promoting extracellular matrix degradation and growth factor activation. The current study was undertaken to determine the efficacy of a urokinase-derived peptide (A6) in reducing the lymph node metastases of prostate cancer using a model in which prostatic tumors established in nude mice from orthotopically implanted PC-3 LN4 prostate cancer cells disseminate to the lymph nodes. As a first step in evaluating the in vivo effectiveness of A6, we determined its effect on in vitro invasiveness. In vitro, A6 reduced the invasiveness of PC-3 LN4 cells through a Matrigel-coated filter without affecting growth rate. A first in vivo survival experiment showed that all A6-treated mice were alive after 57 days, and half of them tumor-free, whereas all control mice receiving vehicle had died. In a second experiment with a larger tumor inoculum and a longer delay until treatment, whereas 71% of control mice and 83% of mice treated with a scrambled peptide developed lymph node metastases, only 22 to 25% of A6-treated mice had positive lymph nodes. Further, lymph node volume, reflective of tumor burden at the secondary site, was diminished 70% in A6-treated mice. In conclusion, we provide definitive evidence that a peptide spanning the connecting region of urokinase suppresses metastases and, as a single modality, prolongs the life span of prostate tumor-bearing mice.

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Year:  2003        PMID: 12547719      PMCID: PMC1851141          DOI: 10.1016/S0002-9440(10)63855-2

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Am J Pathol        ISSN: 0002-9440            Impact factor:   4.307


  33 in total

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8.  The Cell Surface Receptor CD44: NMR-Based Characterization of Putative Ligands.

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