4.5 Article

Overexpression of insulin-like growth factor binding protein-5 helps accelerate progression to androgen-independence in the human prostate LNCaP tumor model through activation of phosphatidylinositol 3′-kinase pathway

Journal

ENDOCRINOLOGY
Volume 141, Issue 6, Pages 2257-2265

Publisher

ENDOCRINE SOC
DOI: 10.1210/en.141.6.2257

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Although insulin-like growth factor (IGF) binding protein-5 (IGFBP-5) is highly up-regulated in normal and malignant pros tate tissues after androgen withdrawal, its functional role in castration-induced apoptosis and androgen-independent progression remains undefined. To analyze the functional significance of IGFBP-5 overexpression in IGF-I-mediated mitogenesis and progression to androgen-independence, IGFBP-5-overexpressing human androgen-dependent LNCaP prostate cancer cells were generated by stable transfection. The growth rates of IGFBP-5-transfected LNCaP cells were significantly faster, compared with either the parental or vector-only transfected LNCaP cells in both the presence and absence of dihydrotestosterone. IGFBP-5-induced increases in LNCaP cell proliferation occurs through both IGF-I-dependent and -independent pathways, with corresponding increases in the cyclin D1 messenger RNA expression and the fraction of cells in S + G2/M phases of the cell cycle. Changes in Akt/protein kinase B, a downstream component of phosphatidyl-inositol 3'-kinase (PI3K) pathway, in the LNCaP sublines also paralleled changes in their growth rates. Although treatment with a PI3K inhibitor induced apoptosis in both control and IGFBP-5-overexpressing LNCaP cells, this PI3K inhibitor-induced apoptosis was prevented by exogenous IGF-I treatment only in IGFBP-5 transfectants, suggesting that IGFBP-5 overexpression can potentiate the antiapoptotic effects of IGF-I. Furthermore, tumor growth and serum prostate-specific antigen levels increased several fold faster in mice bearing IGFBP-5-transfected LNCaP tumors after castration, despite having similar tumor incidence and tumor growth rates with controls when grown in intact mice before castration. Collectively, these data suggest that IGFBP-5 overexpression in prostate cancer cells after castration is an adaptive cell survival mechanism that helps potentiate the antiapoptotic and mitogenic effects of IGF-I, thereby accelerating progression to androgen independence through activation of the PI3K-Akt/protein kinase B signaling pathway.

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