| Literature DB >> 27179930 |
Naihua Liu1, Liu Mei1, Xueying Fan1, Chao Tang1, Xing Ji1, Xinhua Hu1, Wei Shi1, Yu Qian2, Musaddique Hussain1, Junsong Wu3, Chaojun Wang3, Shaoqiang Lin4, Ximei Wu5.
Abstract
Cancer stem cells (CSC) are critical for initiation, metastasis, and relapse of cancers, however, the underlying mechanism governing stemness of CSC remains unknown. Herein, we have investigated the roles of phosphodiesterase 5 (PDE5) in stemness of prostate cancer cells. Both PDE5 and WW domain-containing transcription regulator protein-1 (TAZ), a core effector of Hippo pathway, are highly expressed in the PC3-derived cancer stem cells (PCSC). Either TAZ knockdown or inhibition of PDE5 activity attenuated colony formation, altered expression patterns of stem cell markers, and enhanced cisplatin cytotoxicity, resulting in attenuation of stemness in PCSC. In addition, inhibition of PDE5 activity by its specific inhibitors activates cGMP-dependent protein kinase G (PKG), which in turn induces MST/LATS kinases, resulting in cytosolic degradation of TAZ and activation of Hippo pathway. Accordingly, knockdown of TAZ almost completely abolished PDE5 inhibitor-induced attenuation in stemness in cultured PCSC, whereas knockdown of TAZ not only abolished PDE5 inhibitor-induced attenuation in stemness but also facilitated PDE5 inhibitor-induced trans-differentiation in PCSC xenografts. Together, the present study has uncovered that PDE/cGMP/PKG signal targets to Hippo/TAZ pathway in maintaining stemness of PCSC, and suggested that PDE5 inhibitors in combination with chemotherapeutic agents could effectively prevent initiation, metastasis, and relapse of prostate cancer.Entities:
Keywords: Cancer stem cells; Hippo pathway; PDE5; Stemness; TAZ
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Year: 2016 PMID: 27179930 DOI: 10.1016/j.canlet.2016.05.010
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cancer Lett ISSN: 0304-3835 Impact factor: 8.679