Literature DB >> 18621129

Human prostate stromal cells stimulate increased PSA production in DHEA-treated prostate cancer epithelial cells.

Julia T Arnold1, Nora E Gray, Ketzela Jacobowitz, Lavanya Viswanathan, Pui W Cheung, Kimberly K McFann, Hanh Le, Marc R Blackman.   

Abstract

Dehydroepiandrosterone (DHEA) is commonly used as a dietary supplement and may affect prostate pathophysiology when metabolized to androgens and/or estrogens. Human prostate LAPC-4 cancer cells with a wild type androgen receptor (AR) were treated with DHEA, androgens dihydrotestosterone (DHT), T, or R1881), and E2 and assayed for prostate specific antigen (PSA) protein and gene expression. In LAPC-4 monocultures, DHEA and E2 induced little or no increase in PSA protein or mRNA expression compared to androgen-treated cells. When prostate cancer-associated (6S) stromal cells were added in coculture, DHEA stimulated LAPC-4 cell PSA protein secretion to levels approaching induction by DHT. Also, DHEA induced 15-fold more PSA mRNA in LAPC-4 cocultures than in monocultures. LAPC-4 proliferation was increased 2-3-fold when cocultured with 6S stromal cells regardless of hormone treatment. DHEA-treated 6S stromal cells exhibited a dose- and time-dependent increase in T secretion, demonstrating stromal cell metabolism of DHEA to T. Coculture with non-cancerous stroma did not induce LAPC-4 PSA production, suggesting a differential modulation of DHEA effect in a cancer-associated prostate stromal environment. This coculture model provides a research approach to reveal detailed endocrine, intracrine, and paracrine signaling between stromal and epithelial cells that regulate tissue homeostasis within the prostate, and the role of the tumor microenvironment in cancer progression.

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Year:  2008        PMID: 18621129      PMCID: PMC2570207          DOI: 10.1016/j.jsbmb.2008.06.008

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Steroid Biochem Mol Biol        ISSN: 0960-0760            Impact factor:   4.292


  39 in total

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3.  Endometrial stromal cells regulate epithelial cell growth in vitro: a new co-culture model.

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4.  Stromal cells promote angiogenesis and growth of human prostate tumors in a differential reactive stroma (DRS) xenograft model.

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Review 5.  DHEA and its transformation into androgens and estrogens in peripheral target tissues: intracrinology.

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6.  Dissociation between androgen responsiveness for malignant growth vs. expression of prostate specific differentiation markers PSA, hK2, and PSMA in human prostate cancer models.

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7.  Lycopene inhibits IGF-I signal transduction and growth in normal prostate epithelial cells by decreasing DHT-modulated IGF-I production in co-cultured reactive stromal cells.

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9.  Pharmacokinetics of dehydroepiandrosterone and its metabolites after long-term daily oral administration to healthy young men.

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Authors:  K D Voigt; W Bartsch
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  22 in total

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Authors:  Xunxian Liu; Renee Y Choi; Shayma M Jawad; Julia T Arnold
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2.  The CXCL12/CXCR4 axis promotes ligand-independent activation of the androgen receptor.

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3.  The EPI bioassay identifies natural compounds with estrogenic activity that are potent inhibitors of androgenic pathways in human prostate stromal and epithelial cells.

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5.  Endocrine-immune-paracrine interactions in prostate cells as targeted by phytomedicines.

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Review 6.  Molecular mechanisms of castration-resistant prostate cancer progression.

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Review 9.  Stroma-epithelium crosstalk in prostate cancer.

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10.  TGFβ1 alters androgenic metabolites and hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase enzyme expression in human prostate reactive stromal primary cells: Is steroid metabolism altered by prostate reactive stromal microenvironment?

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