Yuan Ta-Chun, Veeramani Suresh, Lin Fen-Fen, Kondrikou Dmitry, Zelivianski Stanislav, Igawa Tsukasa, Karan Dev, Batra Surinder K, Lin Ming-Fong
Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, College of Medicine, University of Nebraska Medical Center, 985870 Nebraska Medical Center, Omaha, NE 68198, USA.
Endocr Relat Cancer. 2006 Mar;13(1):151-67. doi: 10.1677/erc.1.01043.
Neuroendocrine (NE) cells are the minor cell populations in normal prostate epithelial compartments. During prostate carcinogenesis, the number of NE cells in malignant lesions increases, correlating with its tumorigenicity and hormone-refractory growth. It is thus proposed that cancerous NE cells promote prostate cancer (PCa) cell progression and its androgen-independent proliferation, although the origin of the cancerous NE cells is not clear. To investigate the role of cancerous NE cells in prostate carcinogenesis, we characterized three NE subclone cell lines-NE-1.3, NE-1.8 and NE-1.9, which were transdifferentiated from androgen-sensitive human PCa LNCaP cells by culturing in an androgen-depleted environment, resembling clinical androgen-ablation therapy. These subclone cells acquire many features of NE cells seen in clinical prostate carcinomas, for example exhibiting a neuronal morphology and expressing multiple NE markers, including neuron-specific enolase, chromogranin B, neurotensin, parathyroid hormone-related peptide, and to a lesser degree for chromogranin A, while lacking androgen receptor (AR) or prostate specific antigen (PSA) expression. These cells represent terminally differentiated stable cells because after 3 months of re-culturing in a medium containing androgenic activity, they still retained the NE phenotype and expressed NE markers. Despite these NE cells having a slow growth rate, they readily developed xenograft tumors. Furthermore, media conditioned by these NE cells exhibited a stimulatory effect on proliferation and PSA secretion by LNCaP cells in androgen-deprived conditions. Additionally, we found that receptor protein tyrosine phosphatase alpha plays a role in upregulating multiple NE markers and acquiring the NE phenotype. These NE cells thus represent cancerous NE cells and could serve as a useful cell model system for investigating the role of cancerous NE cells in hormone-refractory proliferation of PCa cells.
神经内分泌(NE)细胞是正常前列腺上皮区室中的少数细胞群体。在前列腺癌发生过程中,恶性病变中NE细胞的数量增加,这与其致瘤性和激素难治性生长相关。因此,有人提出癌性NE细胞促进前列腺癌(PCa)细胞进展及其雄激素非依赖性增殖,尽管癌性NE细胞的起源尚不清楚。为了研究癌性NE细胞在前列腺癌发生中的作用,我们对三个NE亚克隆细胞系——NE-1.3、NE-1.8和NE-1.9进行了表征,它们是通过在雄激素缺乏的环境中培养从雄激素敏感的人PCa LNCaP细胞转分化而来的,类似于临床雄激素消融治疗。这些亚克隆细胞获得了临床前列腺癌中所见NE细胞的许多特征,例如呈现神经元形态并表达多种NE标志物,包括神经元特异性烯醇化酶、嗜铬粒蛋白B、神经降压素、甲状旁腺激素相关肽,而嗜铬粒蛋白A的表达程度较低,同时缺乏雄激素受体(AR)或前列腺特异性抗原(PSA)表达。这些细胞代表终末分化的稳定细胞,因为在含有雄激素活性的培养基中重新培养3个月后,它们仍保留NE表型并表达NE标志物。尽管这些NE细胞生长速度缓慢,但它们很容易形成异种移植肿瘤。此外,这些NE细胞条件培养基对雄激素剥夺条件下LNCaP细胞的增殖和PSA分泌具有刺激作用。此外,我们发现受体蛋白酪氨酸磷酸酶α在上调多种NE标志物和获得NE表型中起作用。因此,这些NE细胞代表癌性NE细胞,可作为研究癌性NE细胞在PCa细胞激素难治性增殖中作用的有用细胞模型系统。