Li Yiwei, Che Mingxin, Bhagat Sunita, Ellis Kerrie-Lynn, Kucuk Omer, Doerge Daniel R, Abrams Judith, Cher Michael L, Sarkar Fazlul H
Department of Pathology, Karmanos Cancer Institute, Wayne State University School of Medicine, Detroit, MI 48201, USA.
Neoplasia. 2004 Jul-Aug;6(4):354-63. doi: 10.1593/neo.03478.
Prostate cancer frequently metastasizes to the bone, and the treatment outcome for metastatic prostate cancer has been disappointing so far. Dietary genistein, derived primarily from soy product, has been proposed to be partly responsible for the low rate of prostate cancer in Asians. Our previous studies have shown that genistein elicits pleiotropic effects on prostate cancer cells, but there are no studies documenting comprehensive gene expression profiles and antitumor effects of dietary genistein on human prostate cancer grown in human bone environment. In this study, we investigated the effects of genistein on PC3 prostate cancer cells and experimental PC3 bone tumors created by injecting PC3 cells into human bone fragments previously implanted in severe combined immunodeficient (SCID) mice (SCID human model). We found that genistein significantly inhibited PC3 bone tumor growth using both prevention and intervention strategies. By using microarray and real-time polymerase chain reaction technology, we found that genistein regulated the expression of multiple genes involved in the control of cell growth, apoptosis, and metastasis both in vitro and in vivo. For example, the expression of various metalloproteinases (MMPs) in PC3 bone tumors was inhibited by genistein treatment, whereas osteoprotegerin was upregulated. MMP immunostaining and transfection experiments also demonstrated that MMP-9 expression was inhibited in PC3 cells in vitro and PC3 bone tumors in vivo after genistein treatment. These results, particularly the in vivo results, demonstrate that dietary genistein may inhibit prostate cancer bone metastasis by regulating metastasis-related genes. Genistein may thus be a promising agent for the prevention and/or treatment of prostate cancer.
前列腺癌常转移至骨骼,而转移性前列腺癌的治疗效果至今仍不尽人意。主要来源于豆制品的膳食染料木黄酮,被认为是亚洲人前列腺癌发病率较低的部分原因。我们之前的研究表明,染料木黄酮对前列腺癌细胞具有多效性作用,但尚无研究记录膳食染料木黄酮对在人类骨环境中生长的人类前列腺癌的全面基因表达谱及抗肿瘤作用。在本研究中,我们调查了染料木黄酮对PC3前列腺癌细胞以及通过将PC3细胞注射到先前植入严重联合免疫缺陷(SCID)小鼠体内的人类骨碎片中所形成的实验性PC3骨肿瘤的影响(SCID人类模型)。我们发现,使用预防和干预策略时,染料木黄酮均能显著抑制PC3骨肿瘤的生长。通过使用微阵列和实时聚合酶链反应技术,我们发现染料木黄酮在体外和体内均调节了多个参与细胞生长、凋亡及转移控制的基因的表达。例如,染料木黄酮处理可抑制PC3骨肿瘤中各种金属蛋白酶(MMPs)的表达,而骨保护素则上调。MMP免疫染色和转染实验也表明,染料木黄酮处理后,体外PC3细胞和体内PC3骨肿瘤中的MMP-9表达均受到抑制。这些结果,尤其是体内实验结果,表明膳食染料木黄酮可能通过调节与转移相关的基因来抑制前列腺癌骨转移。因此,染料木黄酮可能是预防和/或治疗前列腺癌的一种有前景的药物。