| Literature DB >> 31276604 |
Yuichiro Sawada1,2,3, Tadahiko Kikugawa1, Hiroyuki Iio1,2,3, Iori Sakakibara4, Shuhei Yoshida2, Aoi Ikedo3, Yuta Yanagihara2,3,5, Noritaka Saeki3,5, Balázs Győrffy6,7, Takeshi Kishida8, Yoichiro Okubo9, Yoshiyasu Nakamura10, Yohei Miyagi10, Takashi Saika1, Yuuki Imai2,3,5.
Abstract
The prognosis of patients with progressive prostate cancers that are hormone refractory and/or have bone metastasis is poor. Multiple therapeutic targets to improve prostate cancer patient survival have been investigated, including orphan GPCRs. In our study, we identified G Protein-Coupled Receptor Class C Group 5 Member A (GPRC5A) as a candidate therapeutic molecule using integrative gene expression analyses of registered data sets for prostate cancer cell lines. Kaplan-Meier analysis of TCGA data sets revealed that patients who have high GPRC5A expression had significantly shorter overall survival. PC3 prostate cancer cells with CRISPR/Cas9-mediated GPRC5A knockout exhibited significantly reduced cell proliferation both in vitro and in vivo. RNA-seq revealed that GPRC5A KO PC3 cells had dysregulated expression of cell cycle-related genes, leading to cell cycle arrest at the G2/M phase. Furthermore, the registered gene expression profile data set showed that the expression level of GPRC5A in original lesions of prostate cancer patients with bone metastasis was higher than that without bone metastasis. In fact, GPRC5A KO PC3 cells failed to establish bone metastasis in xenograft mice models. In addition, our clinical study revealed that GPRC5A expression levels in prostate cancer patient samples were significantly correlated with bone metastasis as well as the patient's Gleason score (GS). Combined assessment with the immunoreactivity of GPRC5A and GS displayed higher specificity for predicting the occurrence of bone metastasis. Together, our findings indicate that GPRC5A can be a possible therapeutic target and prognostic marker molecule for progressive prostate cancer.Entities:
Keywords: GPCR; GPRC5A; bone metastasis; prostate cancer
Year: 2019 PMID: 31276604 DOI: 10.1002/ijc.32554
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Cancer ISSN: 0020-7136 Impact factor: 7.396