4.5 Article

Androgen receptor expression in prostate carcinoma cells suppresses α6β4 integrin-mediated invasive phenotype

Journal

ENDOCRINOLOGY
Volume 141, Issue 9, Pages 3172-3182

Publisher

ENDOCRINE SOC
DOI: 10.1210/en.141.9.3172

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Prostate cancer cells may lose androgen-sensitivity after androgen ablation therapy, becoming highly invasive and metastatic. The biological mechanisms responsible for higher tumurogenicity of androgen-independent prostate carcinomas are not entirely known. We demonstrate that androgen receptor regulation of adhesion and invasion of prostate cancer cells through modulation of alpha 6 beta 4 integrin expression may be one of the molecular mechanisms responsible of this phenomenon. We found that protein and gene expressions of alpha 6 and beta 4 subunits were strongly reduced in the androgen-sensitive cell line LNCaP respect to the androgen-independent PC3 and that transfection of PC3 cells with a full-length androgen receptor expression vector resulted in a decreased expression of alpha 6 beta 4 integrin, reduced adhesion on laminin, and suppressed Matrigel invasion. Growth in soft agar was also suppressed in androgen receptor-positive PC3 clones. Treatment of androgen receptor positive clones with the synthetic androgen R1881 further reduced alpha 6 and beta 4 messenger RNA expression as well as adhesion on laminin and Matrigel invasion. Our results indicate that androgens regulate cell-extracellular matrix adhesion and invasion by modulation of integrin expression and function, thus keeping a low invasive phenotype of prostate cancer cells.

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