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Androgen represses opioid growth factor receptor (OGFR) in human prostate cancer LNCaP cells and OGFR expression in human prostate cancer tissue.

Authors :
Yamashita H
Shuman L
Warrick JI
Raman JD
Degraff DJ
Source :
American journal of clinical and experimental urology [Am J Clin Exp Urol] 2018 Aug 20; Vol. 6 (4), pp. 164-171. Date of Electronic Publication: 2018 Aug 20 (Print Publication: 2018).
Publication Year :
2018

Abstract

Opioid receptors are G protein-coupled receptors that bind opioid ligands including endorphins and enkephalins. The existence of a number of opioid receptors, including the mu-opioid receptor (OPRM1), delta-opioid receptor (OPRD1), kappa-opioid receptor (OPRK1) and zeta-opioid receptor (OGFR) have been reported. However, the potential expression and role of these receptors on human prostate carcinogenesis is unknown. In the present study, we examined opioid receptor expression in human prostate cancer cell lines and in prostate cancer tissue. We observed using quantitative real-time PCR analysis that OGFR and OGFRL1 mRNA is expressed in all examined prostate cancer cell lines as well as in an immortalized, non-tumorigenic prostate epithelial cell line (RWPE-1). Conversely, OPRK1 mRNA expression was detected in a more limited number of cell lines (LNCaP and VCaP), while OPRD1 and OPRM1 mRNA expression was undetectable in all examined prostate cell lines. Interestingly, androgen sensitive LNCaP cells expressed high amounts of OPRK1, OGFR and OGFRL1 compared to other cell lines. Therefore, we investigated the effect of androgen on the mRNA expression of OPRK1, OGFR, OGFRL1 in the LNCaP cell line. Our results demonstrated that the synthetic androgen (R1881) represses mRNA of OPRK1, OGFR and OGFRL1 in a time-dependent manner. Furthermore, immunohistochemistry demonstrated OGFR is expressed at high levels in prostate cancer tissue compared to benign tissue, and that OGFR expression is high in undifferentiated and aggressive prostate cancer tissue. This is the first study showing OGFR and OGFRL1 are androgen repressed genes, and these results suggest a role for the opioid signaling axis in prostate cancer.<br />Competing Interests: None.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
2330-1910
Volume :
6
Issue :
4
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
American journal of clinical and experimental urology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
30246052