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Acquisition of paclitaxel resistance is associated with a more aggressive and invasive phenotype in prostate cancer.


ABSTRACT: Drug resistance is a major limitation to the successful treatment of advanced prostate cancer (PCa). Patients who have metastatic, castration-resistant PCa (mCRPC) are treated with chemotherapeutics. However, these standard therapy modalities culminate in the development of resistance. We established paclitaxel resistance in a classic, androgen-insensitive mCRPC cell line (DU145) and, using a suite of molecular and biophysical methods, characterized the structural and functional changes in vitro and in vivo that are associated with the development of drug resistance. After acquiring paclitaxel-resistance, cells exhibited an abnormal nuclear morphology with extensive chromosomal content, an increase in stiffness, and faster cytoskeletal remodeling dynamics. Compared with the parental DU145, paclitaxel-resistant (DU145-TxR) cells became highly invasive and motile in vitro, exercised greater cell traction forces, and formed larger and rapidly growing tumors in mouse xenografts. Furthermore, DU145-TxR cells showed a discrete loss of keratins but a distinct gain of ZEB1, Vimentin and Snail, suggesting an epithelial-to-mesenchymal transition. These findings demonstrate, for the first time, that paclitaxel resistance in PCa is associated with a trans-differentiation of epithelial cell machinery that enables more aggressive and invasive phenotype and portend new strategies for developing novel biomarkers and effective treatment modalities for PCa patients.

SUBMITTER: Kim JJ 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC4211414 | biostudies-literature | 2013 Jun

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

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Acquisition of paclitaxel resistance is associated with a more aggressive and invasive phenotype in prostate cancer.

Kim John J JJ   Yin Bo B   Christudass Christhunesa S CS   Terada Naoki N   Rajagopalan Krithika K   Fabry Ben B   Lee Danielle Y DY   Shiraishi Takumi T   Getzenberg Robert H RH   Veltri Robert W RW   An Steven S SS   Mooney Steven M SM  

Journal of cellular biochemistry 20130601 6


Drug resistance is a major limitation to the successful treatment of advanced prostate cancer (PCa). Patients who have metastatic, castration-resistant PCa (mCRPC) are treated with chemotherapeutics. However, these standard therapy modalities culminate in the development of resistance. We established paclitaxel resistance in a classic, androgen-insensitive mCRPC cell line (DU145) and, using a suite of molecular and biophysical methods, characterized the structural and functional changes in vitro  ...[more]

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