| Literature DB >> 19690549 |
S Terry1, G Ploussard, Y Allory, N Nicolaiew, F Boissière-Michot, P Maillé, L Kheuang, E Coppolani, A Ali, F Bibeau, S Culine, R Buttyan, A de la Taille, F Vacherot.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Class III beta-tubulin (betaIII-tubulin) is expressed in tissues of neuronal lineage and also in several human malignancies, including non-small-cell lung carcinoma, breast and ovarian cancer. Overexpression of betaIII-tubulin in these tumours is associated with an unfavourable outcome and resistance to taxane-based therapies. At present, betaIII-tubulin expression remains largely uncharacterised in prostate cancer.Entities:
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Year: 2009 PMID: 19690549 PMCID: PMC2743364 DOI: 10.1038/sj.bjc.6605245
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Br J Cancer ISSN: 0007-0920 Impact factor: 7.640
βIII-tubulin expression before and after hormone therapy
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| Hormone-naive PCa (HNPC) | 71 (95.9) | 3 (4.1) |
| Hormone-therapy-treated PCa (HTPC) | 18 (75) | 6 (25) |
| Castration-resistant PCa (CRPC) | 16 (40) | 24 (60) |
| HNPC/HTPC | ||
| HTPC/CRPC | ||
| HNPC/CRPC | ||
Abbreviation: PCa=prostate carcinoma.
χ and Fisher's exact tests were used to assess associations between hormone and βIII-tubulin status. For post hoc comparisons, the Bonferroni correction was applied. All statistical tests used a two-tailed α=0.05 level of significance.
Figure 1βIII-tubulin expression in prostate cancers. (A–C) Representative tissue microarray element, regular section or biopsy sample stained with antibody to βIII-tubulin with immunostains showing the absence of staining in hormone-naive prostate cancer (panel A) and strong staining in primary (panel B) and metastatic (panel C) castration-resistant refractory prostate cancers. (D and E) Representative consecutive sections stained with antibodies to βIII-tubulin (panel D) or NSE (panel E). Immunostainings show concomitant βIII-tubulin and NSE expression in prostate cancer cells. (F) Prostatic small cell carcinoma showing strong immunoreactivity for βIII-tubulin. Original magnification × 200; inset, × 25.
Figure 2βIII-tubulin expression is regulated by androgen depletion in LNCaP cultures and is expressed in androgen-independent PCa lines. (A) Time-course expression of βIII-tubulin in LNCaPs cultivated in androgen-reduced medium. At day 0, monolayer cultured LNCaP cells were grown in the androgen-reduced medium. Each protein sample (30 μg) was resolved to SDS–PAGE, transferred onto a polyvinylidene difluoride membrane (Millipore) and incubated with a monoclonal antibody against βIII-tubulin or β-actin as an internal control. (B) The same procedure was applied to examine βIII-tubulin expression in various PCa cell lines (LNCaP, 22Rv1, DU145 and PC3) maintained in RPMI 1640 supplemented with 10% fetal bovine serum (FBS), AS, androgen-sensitive; AI, androgen-independent. (C) βIII-tubulin mRNA is reduced on 10 days of stimulation by 10 nM DHT in LNCaP cells relative to the expression in cells maintained in the androgen-reduced medium. Columns, mean±s.e.m.
Figure 3βIII-tubulin expression increases after androgen depletion in LNCaP xenografts. (A) Representative immunostains in LNCaP xenografts with antibody to βIII-tubulin. Immunohistochemical stains show weak or absent staining for LNCaP tumours from a non-castrated mouse (left), while a high proportion of positive cells with intense staining is detected 30 days after castration (right); original magnification, × 200. (B) Means of positive cells for βIII-tubulin in each group. Kruskal–Wallis test (P=0.002) and Mann–Whitney test were used for statistical analysis of the immunohistochemistry scoring results. Columns mean; bars, s.e. *P<0.05.