Regulation of PSA secretion and survival signaling by calcium-independent phopholipase A2β in prostate cancer cells
2009
BACKGROUND
Serum prostate specific antigen (PSA) levels in prostate cancer patients serve as a useful biomarker for diagnosing and monitoring prostate cancer. Recently, secreted PSA has been characterized as an autocrine survival factor through activation of Akt and induction of AR. In the normal prostate, PSA is secreted in the lumen of prostatic ducts to lyse proteins in the seminal coagulum.
METHODS
However, the mechanism for constitutive PSA secretion from benign prostate and its transport across the prostate-blood barrier into serum are unknown. Regulation of peptide secretion by iPLA2-β has been reported in non-prostatic tissue and in prostate tissue iPLA2-β is reported to be under androgen regulation. We investigated whether iPLA2 plays a role for in PSA secretion by comparing iPLA2 activity and expression in normal prostate epithelial RWPE-1 cells and in LNCaP prostate cancer cells. Expression of the two active iPLA2-β mRNA splice variants, LH-iPLA2 and SH-iPLA2, were increased and the inhibitory ankyrin-iPLA2 isoform was markedly reduced in LNCaP cells as compared to normal prostate epithelial RWPE-1 cells.
RESULTS
These changes are consistent with a higher enzymatic activity in LNCaP cells. The iPLA2-β-specific inhibitor BEL inhibited PSA secretion and induced apoptosis in LNCaP cells. iPLA2 knockdown using SiRNA inhibited PSA secretion, downregulated AR and induced apoptosis. Exogenous PSA suppressed BEL-induced apoptosis and neutralizing anti-PSA antibody blocked the survival effect of PSA.
CONCLUSIONS
These data indicate that iPLA2-β participates in regulating PSA secretion and supports the concept that secreted PSA provides an autocrine survival function in LNCaP cells. Prostate 69:1270–1280, 2009. © 2009 Wiley-Liss, Inc.
Keywords:
- Correction
- Source
- Cite
- Save
- Machine Reading By IdeaReader
48
References
30
Citations
NaN
KQI