Apoptosis and inhibition of mitosis are primary mechanisms mediating androgen ablation therapy-induced regression of prostate cancer (PCa). However, PCa readily becomes androgen independent, leading to fatal disease. Up-regulated growth and survival signaling is implicated in development of resistance to androgen ablation therapy. We are testing the hypothesis that insulin-like growth factor (IGF) responsiveness is required for androgen-independent (AI) progression. Using the LNCaP human PCa progression model, we have determined that IGF-I-mediated protection from apoptotic stress and enhanced mitotic activity is androgen dependent in LNCaP cells but is androgen independent in lineage-derived C4-2 cells. Both cell lines exhibit androgen-responsive patterns of IGF-I receptor (IGF-IR) expression, activation, and signaling to insulin receptor substrate-2 and AKT. However, C4-2 cells express higher levels of IGF-IR mRNA and protein and exhibit enhanced IGF-I-mediated phosphorylation and downstream signaling under androgen-deprived conditions. In comparisons of naïve and AI metastatic human PCa specimens, we have confirmed that IGF-IR levels are elevated in advanced disease. Together with our LNCaP/C4-2 AI progression model data, these results indicate that increased IGF-IR expression is associated with AI antiapoptotic and promitotic IGF signaling in PCa disease progression.
At autopsy >80% of prostate cancers have established macrometastases in marrow containing bone. The mechanism(s) to explain this remarkable level of bone involvement remain to be elucidated. We examined the adhesive and invasive behavior of prostate cancer cells to osteoblastic and human bone marrow endothelial cells (HBME-1) in an attempt to explain the tropism of prostate cells for bone. We found an inverse relationship between adhesion and prostate cell tumorigenicity and metastatic potential. Relative cell adhesion of P69 between cell lines was 1.74-fold (95% confidence interval [CI] ؍ 1.15-2.64) and 1.58-fold (95% CI ؍ 0.94 -2.68) greater at 1 hr and 2 hr, respectively, than LNCaP that was essentially equivalent to C4-2 cells when using an osteoblastic cell line, D1 as the substrate. Similar results were acquired when HBME-1 were used as substratum. There was a marked increase in adhesion of the poorly tumorigenic cell line P69 as compared to the cancer cells to HBME-1. P69 adhesion was 2.78-fold (95% CI ؍ 1.87-4.84) and 2.0-fold (95% CI ؍ 1.43-2.80) greater at 1 hr and 2 hr, respectively when compared to LNCaP or C4-2 cells. D1 cells, a bone homing osteoblastic precursor, behaved contrary to the metastatic, bone-colonizing C4-2 cell line and bound best to other bone cells but not as well as a nonhoming fetal bone marrow-derived cell line, D2. Invasion of prostate cancer cells through HBME-1 lawns was examined at 8 hr and 16 hr. In contrast to the adhesion studies, the invasion of the more aggressive C4-2 cells was 3.46-fold (95% CI ؍ 1.18 -10.17) and 2.65-fold (95% CI ؍ 1.26 -5.56) greater at 8 hr and 16 hr, respectively than LNCaP cells. Similarly, LNCaP cell invasion was 1.73-fold (95% CI ؍ 0.69 -4.37) and 2.35-fold (95% CI ؍ 1.41-3.93) greater at 8 hr and 16 hr, respectively than P69 cells at the invasion of HBME-1 monolayers. At 8 hr, C4-2 cells had 6.0-fold (95% CI ؍ 2.63,13.65) higher invasive potential than P69 cells. Phage display biopanning of LNCaP cells versus C4-2 cells in vitro using 4 separate techniques repeatedly identified the same peptide in support of minimal cell surface changes associated with the ability of C4-2 cells to metastasize to bone. As integrins are vital to cell adhesion and migration, we examined the integrin subunit expression in the prostate cell lines. The expression of integrin subunits is much higher in the nontumorigenic cell line, P69, whereas the differences in integrin expression between LNCaP and C4-2 are negligible. Only ␣ 2 and  5 integrin subunits increase from LNCaP to C4-2. Given that C4-2 cells spontaneously metastasize to bone in vivo and LNCaP cells do not, these studies imply that the ability of a metastatic prostate cancer cell to colonize the bone is not completely dependent upon the ability of the cancer cell to adhere to either osteoblastic cells or to the bone marrow endothelial cell lining. Therefore, the initial interaction between the bone endothelium or stroma and prostate cells is not accurately referred to as a tropic or homi...
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