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IL-1? induces p62/SQSTM1 and represses androgen receptor expression in prostate cancer cells.


ABSTRACT: Chronic inflammation is associated with advanced prostate cancer (PCa), although the mechanisms governing inflammation-mediated PCa progression are not fully understood. PCa progresses to an androgen independent phenotype that is incurable. We previously showed that androgen independent, androgen receptor negative (AR(-) ) PCa cell lines have high p62/SQSTM1 levels required for cell survival. We also showed that factors in the HS-5 bone marrow stromal cell (BMSC) conditioned medium can upregulate p62 in AR(+) PCa cell lines, leading us to investigate AR expression under those growth conditions. In this paper, mRNA, protein, and subcellular analyses reveal that HS-5 BMSC conditioned medium represses AR mRNA, protein, and nuclear accumulation in the C4-2 PCa cell line. Using published gene expression data, we identify the inflammatory cytokine, IL-1?, as a candidate BMSC paracrine factor to regulate AR expression and find that IL-1? is sufficient to both repress AR and upregulate p62 in multiple PCa cell lines. Immunostaining demonstrates that, while the C4-2 population shows a primarily homogeneous response to factors in HS-5 BMSC conditioned medium, IL-1? elicits a strikingly heterogeneous response; suggesting that there are other regulatory factors in the conditioned medium. Finally, while we observe concomitant AR loss and p62 upregulation in IL-1?-treated C4-2 cells, silencing of AR or p62 suggests that IL-1? regulates their protein accumulation through independent pathways. Taken together, these in vitro results suggest that IL-1? can drive PCa progression in an inflammatory microenvironment through AR repression and p62 induction to promote the development and survival of androgen independent PCa.

SUBMITTER: Chang MA 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC4517682 | biostudies-literature | 2014 Dec

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

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IL-1β induces p62/SQSTM1 and represses androgen receptor expression in prostate cancer cells.

Chang M A MA   Patel V V   Gwede M M   Morgado M M   Tomasevich K K   Fong E L EL   Farach-Carson M C MC   Delk Nikki A NA  

Journal of cellular biochemistry 20141201 12


Chronic inflammation is associated with advanced prostate cancer (PCa), although the mechanisms governing inflammation-mediated PCa progression are not fully understood. PCa progresses to an androgen independent phenotype that is incurable. We previously showed that androgen independent, androgen receptor negative (AR(-) ) PCa cell lines have high p62/SQSTM1 levels required for cell survival. We also showed that factors in the HS-5 bone marrow stromal cell (BMSC) conditioned medium can upregulat  ...[more]

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