| Literature DB >> 29524555 |
Matthew Utter1, Sohag Chakraborty1, Limor Goren2, Lucas Feuser3, Yuan-Shan Zhu4, David A Foster5.
Abstract
Prostate cells are hormonally driven to grow and divide. Typical treatments for prostate cancer involve blocking activation of the androgen receptor by androgens. Androgen deprivation therapy can lead to the selection of cancer cells that grow and divide independently of androgen receptor activation. Prostate cancer cells that are insensitive to androgens commonly display metastatic phenotypes and reduced long-term survival of patients. In this study we provide evidence that androgen-insensitive prostate cancer cells have elevated PLD activity relative to the androgen-sensitive prostate cancer cells. PLD activity has been linked with promoting survival in many human cancer cell lines; and consistent with the previous studies, suppression of PLD activity in the prostate cancer cells resulted in apoptotic cell death. Of significance, suppressing the elevated PLD activity in androgen resistant prostate cancer lines also blocked the ability of these cells to migrate and invade Matrigel™. Since survival signals are generally an early event in tumorigenesis, the apparent coupling of survival and metastatic phenotypes implies that metastasis is an earlier event in malignant prostate cancer than generally thought. This finding has implications for screening strategies designed to identify prostate cancers before dissemination.Entities:
Keywords: Apoptosis; Metastasis; Prostate cancer; Prostate cancer phospholipase D; Survival
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29524555 PMCID: PMC5901760 DOI: 10.1016/j.canlet.2018.03.006
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cancer Lett ISSN: 0304-3835 Impact factor: 8.679