The results of this study reveal substantial changes in the expression profile of thyroid hormone receptors suggesting a possible deregulation that could trigger breast cancer development.
Previous reports showed that PCPH is mutated or deregulated in some human tumors, suggesting its participation in malignant progression. Immunohistochemical analyses showed that PCPH is not expressed in normal prostate, but its expression increases along cancer progression stages, being detectable in benign prostatic hyperplasia, highly expressed in prostatic intraepithelial neoplasia, and remaining at high levels in prostate carcinoma. Experiments designed to investigate the contribution of PCPH to the malignant phenotype of prostate cancer cells showed that PCPH overexpression in PC-3 cells, which express nearly undetectable PCPH levels, increased collagen I expression and enhanced invasiveness, whereas shRNA-mediated PCPH knockdown in LNCaP cells, which express high PCPH levels, down-regulated collagen I expression and decreased invasiveness. PCPH regulated invasiveness and collagen I expression by a mechanism involving protein kinase CD (PKCD): (a) PCPH knockdown in LNCaP cells decreased PKCD levels relative to control cells; (b) PKCD knockdown in LNCaP cells recapitulated all changes caused by PCPH knockdown; and (c) forced expression of PKCD in cells with knocked down PCPH reverted all changes provoked by PCPH down-regulation and rescued the original phenotype of LNCaP cells. These results strongly suggested that the expression level and/or mutational status of PCPH contributes to determine the invasiveness of prostate cancer cells through a mechanism involving PKCD. Data from immunohistochemical analyses in serial sections of normal, premalignant, and malignant prostate specimens underscored the clinical significance of our findings by showing remarkably similar patterns of expression for PCPH and PKCD, thus strongly suggesting their likely coregulation in human tumors.
PCPH is a gene involved in the regulation of eukaryotic cell proliferation and stress response. Recently, analyses of human and animal solid tumors and cell lines suggested that PCPH protein deregulation may participate in neoplastic progression. To test this possibility, we first examined PCPH expression in several laryngeal carcinoma cell lines by Western analysis. The results showed the presence of altered PCPH polypeptides in these cells, accompanied by the loss of the PCPH form present in normal laryngeal epithelial cells, a deregulated expression pattern similar to that reported previously. We then analyzed PCPH expression in 59 dysplastic lesions of the human larynx, representative of the mild, moderate, and severe stages of the disease. Immunohistochemical data showed that, compared with normal laryngeal mucosa, PCPH expression in the dysplastic samples was associated with areas of epithelial cell maturation rather than with regions of increased proliferation. Furthermore, PCPH expression decreased parallel to the increase in cellular atypia of the dysplastic samples: PCPH either was expressed at very low levels or not expressed in cases of severe dysplasia/carcinoma in situ. This trend toward loss of PCPH expression along malignant progression of the larynx was confirmed by the low to null expression of PCPH in samples of invasive laryngeal carcinoma and by the complete absence of PCPH immunostaining in a laryngeal carcinoma-derived liver metastasis. These results indicated that PCPH protein analysis might allow for the distinction between grades of laryngeal dysplasia. In addition, detection of altered PCPH polypeptides by Western analysis potentially can be applied to the early identification of laryngeal squamous cell carcinoma.
Abstract. Testicular germ cell tumors (TGCTs) include various malignancies with distinct pathologies that share a common precursor lesion (intratubular germ cell neoplasia, unclassified, ITGCNU, or carcinoma in situ, CIS). TGCTs, as a whole, represent a highly curable tumor paradigm, with high sensitivity to radiotherapy and, especially, to cisplatinbased chemotherapy. However, a percentage of cases display therapeutic resistance, and the molecular mechanisms underlying such resistant phenotype remain to be elucidated. We put forward the notion that expression of oncogenic forms of the PCPH gene, which are known to confer resistance to radiation and chemotherapeutic drugs, including cisplatin, may be expressed in TGCTs, and thus contribute to the development of therapeutic resistance. To begin testing this concept, we studied PCPH expression in human TGCT cell lines and in 54 solid tumors by RT-PCR, Western immunoblot and immunohistochemistry. The results demonstrated that: i) PCPH is expressed in TGCT cell lines and tumors, including CIS; ii) its expression levels vary among different TGCT pathologies, being generally higher in well differentiated regions and lower in areas of predominant proliferation; iii) PCPH expression is substantially increased in tumors relative to matched normal testicular tissue; iv) tumor samples express PCPH polypeptides of low molecular mass, consistent with the known size of the PCPH oncoprotein, that are either absent from, or markedly reduced in, matched normal tissue.Collectively, these results positively identify PCPH as a good early molecular marker for testicular neoplasms, and strongly indicate that immunodetection of truncated PCPH polypeptides may be a useful diagnostic tool for TGCT.
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