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Data from Functional Analysis of Secreted Caveolin-1 in Mouse Models of Prostate Cancer Progression

Authors :
Timothy C. Thompson
Alexei A. Goltsov
Francesco J. Demayo
Ryuta Tanimoto
Kohei Edamura
Shinji Kurosaka
Sanghee Park
Terry L. Timme
Kartik Rajagopalan
Elmoataz Abdel Fattah
Ken-ichi Tabata
Koji Naruishi
Salahaldin A. Tahir
Guangwen Cao
Guang Yang
Masami Watanabe
Publication Year :
2023
Publisher :
American Association for Cancer Research (AACR), 2023.

Abstract

Previously, we reported that caveolin-1 (cav-1) is overexpressed in metastatic prostate cancer and that virulent prostate cancer cells secrete biologically active cav-1. We also showed that cav-1 expression leads to prosurvival activities through maintenance of activated Akt and that cav-1 is taken up by other cav-1–negative tumor cells and/or endothelial cells, leading to stimulation of angiogenic activities through PI-3-K-Akt-eNOS signaling. To analyze the functional consequences of cav-1 overexpression on the development and progression of prostate cancer in vivo, we generated PBcav-1 transgenic mice. Adult male PBcav-1 mice showed significantly increased prostatic wet weight and higher incidence of epithelial hyperplasia compared with nontransgenic littermates. Increased immunostaining for cav-1, proliferative cell nuclear antigen, P-Akt, and reduced nuclear p27Kip1 staining occurred in PBcav-1 hyperplastic prostatic lesions. PBcav-1 mice showed increased resistance to castration-induced prostatic regression and elevated serum cav-1 levels compared with nontransgenic littermates. Intraprostatic injection of androgen-sensitive, cav-1–secreting RM-9 mouse prostate cancer cells resulted in tumors that were larger in PBcav-1 mice than in nontransgenic littermates (P = 0.04). Tail vein inoculation of RM-9 cells produced significantly more experimental lung metastases in PBcav-1 males than in nontransgenic male littermates (P = 0.001), and in cav-1+/+ mice than in cav-1−/− mice (P = 0.041). Combination treatment with surgical castration and systemic cav-1 antibody dramatically reduced the number of experimental metastases. These experimental data suggest a causal association of secreted cav-1 and prostate cancer growth and progression. (Mol Cancer Res 2009;7(9):1446–55)

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....2641d347681895b0b231550b5662d655
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1158/1541-7786.c.6542104