| Literature DB >> 16615098 |
Horacio Murillo1, Lucy J Schmidt, Melissa Karter, Kari A Hafner, Yasushi Kondo, Karla V Ballman, George Vasmatzis, Robert B Jenkins, Donald J Tindall.
Abstract
Studies on the genetic basis of prostate cancer (PCa) have lead to mixed results with the only consensus being that PCa is a complex disease. Our goal was to gain insight into potential events involved in the acquisition of the androgen-refractory phenotype in PCa cells regardless of DNA-change dependence. To this end, we examined two LNCaP PCa cell line models of progression-one developed in vivo and one developed in vitro-using molecular cytogenetic and microarray gene expression analyses and extended this investigation of specific events into PCa tumors. The chromosomal changes observed in both in vivo and in vitro androgen-independent cell lines are similar to those seen in PCa during tumor progression. Correspondingly, gene expression analysis showed significant heterogeneity in the genes expressed among androgen-independent cells, but with some common gene expression changes that correlated with the acquired androgen-independent phenotype. Thus, growth conditions under which the cells progress appeared to impact the mechanisms used for progression, albeit within tumor-type-specific pathways. Our findings suggest that a dynamic and adaptable combination of epigenetic and DNA-change-dependent events can be used by PCa cells for the acquisition of the androgen-independent phenotype. This article contains Supplementary Material available at http://www.interscience.wiley.com/jpages/1045-2257/suppmat. (c) 2006 Wiley-Liss, Inc.Entities:
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Year: 2006 PMID: 16615098 DOI: 10.1002/gcc.20333
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Genes Chromosomes Cancer ISSN: 1045-2257 Impact factor: 5.006