4.7 Article

MnSOD drives neuroendocrine differentiation, androgen independence, and cell survival in prostate cancer cells

Journal

FREE RADICAL BIOLOGY AND MEDICINE
Volume 50, Issue 4, Pages 525-536

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC
DOI: 10.1016/j.freeradbiomed.2010.10.715

Keywords

MnSOD; Prostate cancer; Neuroendocrine differentiation; Androgen independence; Redox modulation; Free radicals

Funding

  1. Fundacion para el Fomento en Asturias de la Investigacion Cientifica Aplicada y la Tecnologia Severo Ochoa
  2. Instituto Universitario the Oncologia del Principado de Asturias Obra Social y Cultural Cajastur
  3. Programa Ramon y Cajal
  4. Fondo Social Europeo from the EC
  5. Fond de Investigacion Sanitaria
  6. Instituto de Salud Carlos III [FISS-07-PI061715]
  7. Gobierno Regional de Asturias [COF08-37]
  8. RTICC [FISS-08-RD06/0020/1042]

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An increase in neuroendocrine (NE) cell number has been associated with progression of prostate tumor, one of the most frequent cancers among Western males. We previously reported that mitochondria] manganese superoxide dismutase (MnSOD) increases during the NE differentiation process. The goal of this study was to find whether MnSOD up-regulation is enough to induce NE differentiation. Several human prostate cancer LNCaP cell clones stably overexpressing MnSOD were characterized and two were selected (MnSOD-S4 and MnSOD-S12). MnSOD overexpression induces NE morphological features as well as coexpression of the NE marker synaptophysin. Both MnSOD clones exhibit lower superoxide levels and higher H2O2 levels. MnSOD-overexpressing cells show higher proliferation rates in complete medium, but in steroid-free medium MnSOD-S12 cells are still capable of proliferation. MnSOD up-regulation decreases androgen receptor and prevents its nuclear translocation. MnSOD also induces up-regulation of Bcl-2 and prevents docetaxel-, etoposide-, or TNF-induced cell death. Finally, MnSOD-overexpressing cells enhance growth of androgen-independent PC-3 cells but reduce growth of androgen-dependent cells. These results indicate that redox modulation caused by MnSOD overexpression explains most NE-like features, including morphological changes, NE marker expression, androgen independence, inhibition of apoptosis, and enhancement of cell growth. Many of these events can be associated with the androgen dependent-independent transition during prostate cancer progression. (C) 2010 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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