4.6 Article

Protease-activated receptor-1 impedes prostate and intestinal tumor progression in mice

Journal

JOURNAL OF THROMBOSIS AND HAEMOSTASIS
Volume 16, Issue 11, Pages 2258-2269

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/jth.14277

Keywords

apoptosis; blood coagulation; colonic neoplasms; prostatic neoplasms; protease-activated; receptors

Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health [R01 CA204058, CA207503]
  2. Pelotonia Fellowship Program

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Background: Multiple studies have implicated protease-activated receptor-1 (PAR-1), a G-proteincoupled receptor activated by proteolytic cleavage of its N-terminus, as one target coupling thrombin-mediated proteolysis to tumor progression. Objective: To analyze the role of PAR-1 in the setting of two distinct spontaneously developing tumor models in mice. Methods: We interbred PAR-1-deficient mice with Transgenic Adenocarcinoma of the Mouse Prostate (TRAMP) mice, which spontaneously develop prostate tumors, and adenomatous polyposis coli Min (APC(Min/+)) mice, which spontaneously develop intestinal adenomas. Results: Analyses of TRAMP mice with advanced disease (30 weeks) revealed that PAR-1 deficiency resulted in significantly larger and more aggressive prostate tumors. Prostates collected at an earlier time point (12 weeks of age) revealed that PAR-1 promotes apoptosis in transformed epithelia. In vitro analyses of TRAMP-derived cells revealed that activated protein C-mediated PAR-1 cleavage can induce tumor cell apoptosis, suggesting that tumor cell-intrinsic PAR-1 functions can limit tumor progression. Paralleling results in TRAMP mice, PAR-1-deficient APC(Min/)(+) mice developed three-fold more adenomas than PAR-1-expressing mice, and the adenomas that formed were significantly larger. Moreover, loss of PAR-1 expression was shown to limit apoptosis in transformed intestinal epithelial cells. Conclusions: Together, these results demonstrate a previously unrecognized role for PAR-1 in impeding tumor progression in vivo. These results also offer a cautionary note suggesting that long-term PAR-1 inhibition could increase malignancy risk in some contexts.

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