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Involvement of urokinase and its receptor in the invasiveness of human prostatic carcinoma cell lines.

Authors :
Hoosein NM
Boyd DD
Hollas WJ
Mazar A
Henkin J
Chung LW
Source :
Cancer communications [Cancer Commun] 1991 Aug; Vol. 3 (8), pp. 255-64.
Publication Year :
1991

Abstract

We have investigated the role of urokinase (UK) and its cell-surface receptor in determining the invasiveness of prostate cancer cells. Three human cell lines, DU-145, PC-3 and LNCaP, that differ in androgen-responsiveness and growth characteristics, were tested. Analysis of the conditioned medium by an enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay showed secretion of UK by DU-145 (63 ng/mL/10(6) cells/48 hr) and PC-3 (682 ng/mL/10(6) cells/48 hr), but absence of secretion by LNCaP cells. Western blot analysis and enzyme activity assay of the conditioned medium confirmed these results. Scatchard analysis of radioligand binding with acid pretreated cells showed the presence of a single population of high affinity UK receptors on DU-145 cells (93,000 sites/cell, Kd = 0.9 nM) and PC-3 cells (25,000 sites/cell, Kd = 1.0 nM) but not on LNCaP cells. DU-145 and PC-3 cells were found to be highly invasive in in vitro invasion assays: 4.5 +/- 0.5% and 6.5 +/- 0.5%, respectively, of total tumor cells (approximately 2 x 10(5)) had penetrated reconstituted basement membrane (Matrigel) in a 72 hr incubation in serum-free growth medium. Under similar conditions, less than 0.25% LNCaP cells invaded Matrigel. The data indicate that androgen unresponsive, aggressive prostate tumor cells of high metastatic potential, DU-145 and PC-3, secrete UK and display cell-surface UK receptors, fully charged with the protease. Conversely, relatively indolent LNCaP cells of low metastatic potential do not secrete UK nor do they possess its binding sites. UK receptor antagonists, UK 12-32 and UK 6-135, which compete with labeled UK for binding to prostatic cells but do not inhibit cellular proliferation or UK secretion, markedly reduced DU-145 and PC-3 cell invasion (80-85% inhibition), thereby suggesting an important role of receptor-bound UK in prostate tumor cell invasion.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
0955-3541
Volume :
3
Issue :
8
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Cancer communications
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
1653586
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3727/095535491820873146