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Paracrine sonic hedgehog signalling by prostate cancer cells induces osteoblast differentiation

BACKGROUND: Sonic hedgehog (Shh) and components of its signalling pathway have been identified in human prostate carcinoma and increased levels of their expression appear to correlate with disease progression and metastasis. The mechanism through which Shh signalling could promote metastasis in bone...

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Autores principales: Zunich, Samantha M, Douglas, Taneka, Valdovinos, Maria, Chang, Tiffany, Bushman, Wade, Walterhouse, David, Iannaccone, Philip, Lamm, Marilyn LG
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2009
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2654862/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19254376
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1476-4598-8-12
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author Zunich, Samantha M
Douglas, Taneka
Valdovinos, Maria
Chang, Tiffany
Bushman, Wade
Walterhouse, David
Iannaccone, Philip
Lamm, Marilyn LG
author_facet Zunich, Samantha M
Douglas, Taneka
Valdovinos, Maria
Chang, Tiffany
Bushman, Wade
Walterhouse, David
Iannaccone, Philip
Lamm, Marilyn LG
author_sort Zunich, Samantha M
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Sonic hedgehog (Shh) and components of its signalling pathway have been identified in human prostate carcinoma and increased levels of their expression appear to correlate with disease progression and metastasis. The mechanism through which Shh signalling could promote metastasis in bone, the most common site for prostate carcinoma metastasis, has not yet been investigated. The present study determined the effect of Shh signalling between prostate cancer cells and pre-osteoblasts on osteoblast differentiation, a requisite process for new bone formation that characterizes prostate carcinoma metastasis. RESULTS: LNCaP human prostate cancer cells modified to overexpress Shh (designated LNShh cells) and MC3T3 mouse pre-osteoblasts were maintained as mixed populations within the same culture chamber. In this non-conventional mixed culture system, LNShh cells upregulated the expression of Shh target genes Gli1 and Patched 1 (Ptc1) in MC3T3 cells and this was inhibited by cyclopamine, a specific chemical inhibitor of hedgehog signalling. Concomitantly, MC3T3 cells exhibited time-dependent decreased cell proliferation, upregulated alkaline phosphatase Akp2 gene expression, and increased alkaline phosphatase activity indicative of early phase osteoblast differentiation. LNShh cell-induced differentiation was inhibited in MC3T3 cells stably transfected with a dominant negative form of Gli1, a transcription factor that mediates Shh signalling. Interestingly, LNShh cells did not significantly increase the endogenous expression of the osteoblast differentiation transcription factor Runx2 and its target genes osteocalcin and osteopontin. Consistent with these results, exogenous Shh peptide did not upregulate Runx2 expression in MC3T3 cells. However, Runx2 levels were increased in MC3T3 cells by ascorbic acid, a known stimulator of osteoblast differentiation. CONCLUSION: Altogether, these data demonstrate that Shh-expressing prostate cancer cells can directly and specifically induce differentiation in pre-osteoblasts via a Gli1-dependent mechanism that does not require transcriptional upregulation of Runx2. Paracrine activation of the Shh pathway in osteoblast progenitors and subsequent induction of osteoblast differentiation could be a mechanism through which high levels of Shh expression in prostate carcinoma contribute to bone metastasis. Targeting of paracrine Shh signalling may provide an effective therapeutic strategy against prostate carcinoma metastasis in bone.
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spelling pubmed-26548622009-03-13 Paracrine sonic hedgehog signalling by prostate cancer cells induces osteoblast differentiation Zunich, Samantha M Douglas, Taneka Valdovinos, Maria Chang, Tiffany Bushman, Wade Walterhouse, David Iannaccone, Philip Lamm, Marilyn LG Mol Cancer Research BACKGROUND: Sonic hedgehog (Shh) and components of its signalling pathway have been identified in human prostate carcinoma and increased levels of their expression appear to correlate with disease progression and metastasis. The mechanism through which Shh signalling could promote metastasis in bone, the most common site for prostate carcinoma metastasis, has not yet been investigated. The present study determined the effect of Shh signalling between prostate cancer cells and pre-osteoblasts on osteoblast differentiation, a requisite process for new bone formation that characterizes prostate carcinoma metastasis. RESULTS: LNCaP human prostate cancer cells modified to overexpress Shh (designated LNShh cells) and MC3T3 mouse pre-osteoblasts were maintained as mixed populations within the same culture chamber. In this non-conventional mixed culture system, LNShh cells upregulated the expression of Shh target genes Gli1 and Patched 1 (Ptc1) in MC3T3 cells and this was inhibited by cyclopamine, a specific chemical inhibitor of hedgehog signalling. Concomitantly, MC3T3 cells exhibited time-dependent decreased cell proliferation, upregulated alkaline phosphatase Akp2 gene expression, and increased alkaline phosphatase activity indicative of early phase osteoblast differentiation. LNShh cell-induced differentiation was inhibited in MC3T3 cells stably transfected with a dominant negative form of Gli1, a transcription factor that mediates Shh signalling. Interestingly, LNShh cells did not significantly increase the endogenous expression of the osteoblast differentiation transcription factor Runx2 and its target genes osteocalcin and osteopontin. Consistent with these results, exogenous Shh peptide did not upregulate Runx2 expression in MC3T3 cells. However, Runx2 levels were increased in MC3T3 cells by ascorbic acid, a known stimulator of osteoblast differentiation. CONCLUSION: Altogether, these data demonstrate that Shh-expressing prostate cancer cells can directly and specifically induce differentiation in pre-osteoblasts via a Gli1-dependent mechanism that does not require transcriptional upregulation of Runx2. Paracrine activation of the Shh pathway in osteoblast progenitors and subsequent induction of osteoblast differentiation could be a mechanism through which high levels of Shh expression in prostate carcinoma contribute to bone metastasis. Targeting of paracrine Shh signalling may provide an effective therapeutic strategy against prostate carcinoma metastasis in bone. BioMed Central 2009-03-02 /pmc/articles/PMC2654862/ /pubmed/19254376 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1476-4598-8-12 Text en Copyright © 2009 Zunich et al; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0 This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License ( (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0) ), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Research
Zunich, Samantha M
Douglas, Taneka
Valdovinos, Maria
Chang, Tiffany
Bushman, Wade
Walterhouse, David
Iannaccone, Philip
Lamm, Marilyn LG
Paracrine sonic hedgehog signalling by prostate cancer cells induces osteoblast differentiation
title Paracrine sonic hedgehog signalling by prostate cancer cells induces osteoblast differentiation
title_full Paracrine sonic hedgehog signalling by prostate cancer cells induces osteoblast differentiation
title_fullStr Paracrine sonic hedgehog signalling by prostate cancer cells induces osteoblast differentiation
title_full_unstemmed Paracrine sonic hedgehog signalling by prostate cancer cells induces osteoblast differentiation
title_short Paracrine sonic hedgehog signalling by prostate cancer cells induces osteoblast differentiation
title_sort paracrine sonic hedgehog signalling by prostate cancer cells induces osteoblast differentiation
topic Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2654862/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19254376
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1476-4598-8-12
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