Fatty acid binding protein 5 (FABP5) delivers ligands from the cytosol directly to the nuclear receptor PPARβ/δ and thus facilitates the ligation and enhances the transcriptional activity of the receptor. We show here that expression levels of both FABP5 and PPARβ/δ are correlated with the tumorigenic potential of prostate cancer cell lines. We show further that FABP5 comprises a direct target gene for PPARβ/δ and thus the binding protein and its cognate receptor are engaged in a positive feedback loop. The observations demonstrate that, similarly to effects observed in mammary carcinomas, activation of the FABP5/PPARβ/δ pathway induces PPARβ/δ target genes involved in cell survival and growth and enhances cell proliferation and anchorage-independent growth in prostate cancer cells. Furthermore, the data show that downregulation of either FABP5 or PPARβ/δ inhibits the growth of the highly malignant prostate cancer PC3M cells. These studies suggest that the FABP5/PPARβ/δ pathway may play a general role in facilitating tumor progression and that inhibition of the pathway may comprise a novel strategy in treatment of cancer.
Abstract. C-FABP or E-FABP is a metastasis inducing gene over expressed in human prostate carcinomas. To study its prognostic significance, an archival set of prostate tissues was analysed immunohistochemically. Levels of both nuclear and cytoplasmic C-FABP expression in carcinoma cells were significantly higher than those in normal and BPH tissues and the increased C-FABP was significantly associated with a reduced patient survival time. To test the therapeutic potential of targeting C-FABP, a clone (Si-clone-2) of cells was established by interfering C-FABP expression in highly malignant PC-3M cells. Suppression of C-FABP in cancer cells significantly inhibited their proliferation and tumourigenicity in vitro. When Si-clone-2 cells were orthotopically implanted into the prostate gland of mouse, 2/13 mice produced primary tumours with an average size of 23±5 mg, and no metastasis was produced in any of the 13 animals. Whereas in the control group, all 14 mice produced primary tumours with an average size of 1450±370 mg and 9/14 (64.3%) produced metastasis. When inoculated subcutaneously, all 5 mice inoculated with control cells developed tumours from day 4, with an average size of 1471±544 mm 3 at 5 weeks after the inoculation; whereas Si-clone-2 cells produced no tumours in any of the 5 animals at any time-point, indicating the suppression occurred at the initiation stage. Our results suggest that C-FABP may be used as a potential prognostic marker to predict patient outcome and the increased C-FABP expression is a possible target to inhibit the malignant progression of prostate cancer cells.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.