4.6 Article

The Differential Paracrine Role of the Endothelium in Prostate Cancer Cells

Journal

CANCERS
Volume 14, Issue 19, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/cancers14194750

Keywords

angiocrine effect; endothelial cells; cancer; prostate cancer; microenvironment

Categories

Funding

  1. FONDECYT Regular [1161115, 1221067, 1200250]
  2. Department of Defense [W81XWH-12-1-0341]
  3. ANID (ANID PFCHA/Doctorado Nacional/2014) [21140138]

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This study investigates the paracrine crosstalk between vascular endothelial cells and prostate cancer cells. The results indicate that endothelial cells secrete signals that promote the proliferation and growth of prostate cancer cells and selectively increase the migration, invasion, and metastatic potential of aggressive prostate cancer cells. Molecular analyses show that endothelial cells induce epigenetic changes in migratory pathways in aggressive prostate cancer cells. The findings suggest that the interaction between endothelial cells and prostate cancer cells may play an important role in the progression of prostate cancer.
Simple Summary A growing body of literature supports the concept that a tumor mass is under the strict control of the microvascular endothelium and that the perfusion of oxygen and nutrients by capillary vessels to the tumor mass is reinforced by potent paracrine activity from the vascular endothelial cells. In our study, we investigate the biological and molecular implications of the paracrine crosstalk between vascular endothelial cells and prostate cancer cells. Our results indicate that the endothelial cells were able to secrete molecular signals that promote the proliferation and growth of low and highly aggressive prostate cancer cells and selectively increased the migration, invasion and metastatic potential of highly aggressive prostate cancer cells. The molecular analyses indicated that endothelial cells induced a differential effect on gene expression profile when comparing low versus highly aggressive prostate cancer cells, causing an enrichment of epigenetic changes in migratory pathways in highly aggressive prostate cancer cells. In conclusion, our results indicate that endothelial cells release signals that favor tumor growth and aggressiveness and that this interaction may play an important role in the progression of prostate cancer. The survival of patients with solid tumors, such as prostate cancer (PCa), has been limited and fleeting with anti-angiogenic therapies. It was previously thought that the mechanism by which the vasculature regulates tumor growth was driven by a passive movement of oxygen and nutrients to the tumor tissue. However, previous evidence suggests that endothelial cells have an alternative role in changing the behavior of tumor cells and contributing to cancer progression. Determining the impact of molecular signals/growth factors released by endothelial cells (ECs) on established PCa cell lines in vitro and in vivo could help to explain the mechanism by which ECs regulate tumor growth. Using cell-conditioned media collected from HUVEC (HUVEC-CM), our data show the stimulated proliferation of all the PCa cell lines tested. However, in more aggressive PCa cell lines, HUVEC-CM selectively promoted migration and invasion in vitro and in vivo. Using a PCa-cell-line-derived xenograft model co-injected with HUVEC or preincubated with HUVEC-CM, our results are consistent with the in vitro data, showing enhanced tumor growth, increased tumor microvasculature and promoted metastasis. Gene set enrichment analyses from RNA-Seq gene expression profiles showed that HUVEC-CM induced a differential effect on gene expression when comparing low versus highly aggressive PCa cell lines, demonstrating epigenetic and migratory pathway enrichments in highly aggressive PCa cells. In summary, paracrine stimulation by HUVEC increased PCa cell proliferation and tumor growth and selectively promoted migration and metastatic potential in more aggressive PCa cell lines.

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