| Literature DB >> 33034050 |
Osman Aksoy1, Jan Pencik1,2,3, Markus Hartenbach4, Ali A Moazzami5, Michaela Schlederer1, Theresa Balber4,6,7, Adam Varady1, Cecile Philippe4, Pascal A Baltzer4, Bismoy Mazumder8, Jonathan B Whitchurch8, Christopher J Roberts8, Andrea Haitel1, Merima Herac1, Martin Susani1, Markus Mitterhauser4,6, Rodrig Marculescu9, Judith Stangl-Kremser10, Melanie R Hassler10, Gero Kramer10, Shahrokh F Shariat10,11,12,13,14,15, Suzanne D Turner16,17, Boris Tichy17, Jan Oppelt17, Sarka Pospisilova17, Sabrina Hartenbach18,19, Simone Tangermann20, Gerda Egger1,6, Heidi A Neubauer21, Richard Moriggl21, Zoran Culig22, Georg Greiner9, Gregor Hoermann9,23, Marcus Hacker2,4, David M Heery8, Olaf Merkel1, Lukas Kenner1,2,20,24.
Abstract
Androgen deprivation therapy (ADT) remains a key approach in the treatment of prostate cancer (PCa). However, PCa inevitably relapses and becomes ADT resistant. Besides androgens, there is evidence that thyroid hormone thyroxine (T4) and its active form 3,5,3'-triiodo-L-thyronine (T3) are involved in the progression of PCa. Epidemiologic evidences show a higher incidence of PCa in men with elevated thyroid hormone levels. The thyroid hormone binding protein μ-Crystallin (CRYM) mediates intracellular thyroid hormone action by sequestering T3 and blocks its binding to cognate receptors (TRα/TRβ) in target tissues. We show in our study that low CRYM expression levels in PCa patients are associated with early biochemical recurrence and poor prognosis. Moreover, we found a disease stage-specific expression of CRYM in PCa. CRYM counteracted thyroid and androgen signaling and blocked intracellular choline uptake. CRYM inversely correlated with [18F]fluoromethylcholine (FMC) levels in positron emission tomography/magnetic resonance imaging of PCa patients. Our data suggest CRYM as a novel antagonist of T3- and androgen-mediated signaling in PCa. The role of CRYM could therefore be an essential control mechanism for the prevention of aggressive PCa growth.Entities:
Keywords: PSMA-PET; androgen receptor; prostate cancer; thyroid hormone receptor; μ-Crystallin
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Year: 2020 PMID: 33034050 PMCID: PMC7756625 DOI: 10.1002/ijc.33332
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Cancer ISSN: 0020-7136 Impact factor: 7.396