4.4 Article

Pharmacological Inhibition of NFκB Reduces Prostate Cancer Related Osteoclastogenesis In Vitro and Osteolysis Ex Vivo

Journal

CALCIFIED TISSUE INTERNATIONAL
Volume 105, Issue 2, Pages 193-204

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s00223-019-00538-9

Keywords

Osteolysis; NF kappa B; Osteoclast; Prostate cancer; Bone; Osteoclastogenesis

Funding

  1. Cancer Research UK (University of Edinburgh)
  2. Breast Cancer Now (University of Sheffield)

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NF kappa B is implicated in cancer and bone remodelling, and we have recently reported that the verified NF kappa B inhibitor Parthenolide (PTN) reduced osteolysis and skeletal tumour growth in models of metastatic breast cancer. Here, we took advantage of in vitro and ex vivo bone cell and organ cultures to study the effects of PTN on the ability of prostate cancer cells and their derived factors to regulate bone cell activity and osteolysis. PTN inhibited the in vitro growth of a panel of human, mouse and rat prostate cancer cells in a concentration-dependent manner with a varying degree of potency. In prostate cancer cell-osteoclast co-cultures, the rat Mat-Ly-Lu, but not human PC3 or mouse RM1-BT, enhanced RANKL stimulated osteoclast formation and PTN reduced these effects without affecting prostate cancer cell viability. In the absence of cancer cells, PTN reduced the support of Mat-Ly-Lu conditioned medium for the adhesion and spreading of osteoclast precursors, and survival of mature osteoclasts. Pre-exposure of osteoblasts to PTN prior to the addition of conditioned medium from Mat-Ly-Lu cells suppressed their ability to support the formation of osteoclasts by inhibition of RANKL/OPG ratio. PTN enhanced the ability of Mat-Ly-Lu derived factors to increase calvarial osteoblast differentiation and growth. Ex vivo, PTN enhanced bone volume in calvaria organ-Mat-Ly-Lu cell co-culture, without affecting Mat-Ly-Lu viability or apoptosis. Mechanistic studies in osteoclasts and osteoblasts confirmed that PTN inhibit NF kappa B activation related to derived factors from Mat-Ly-Lu cells. Collectively, these findings suggest that pharmacological inhibition of the skeletal NF kappa B signalling pathway reduces prostate cancer related osteolysis, but further studies in the therapeutic implications of NF kappa B inhibition in cells of the osteoblastic lineage are needed.

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