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Prognostic Significance and Functional Role of CEP57 in Prostate Cancer()

We have recently shown that centrosomal protein 57 (CEP57) is overexpressed in a subset of human prostate cancers. CEP57 is involved in intracellular transport processes, and its overexpression causes mitotic defects as well as abnormal microtubule nucleation and bundling. In the present study, we f...

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Autores principales: Mang, Josef, Korzeniewski, Nina, Dietrich, Dimo, Sailer, Verena, Tolstov, Yanis, Searcy, Sam, von Hardenberg, Jost, Perner, Sven, Kristiansen, Glen, Marx, Alexander, Roth, Wilfried, Herpel, Esther, Grüllich, Carsten, Popeneciu, Valentin, Pahernik, Sascha, Hadaschik, Boris, Hohenfellner, Markus, Duensing, Stefan
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Neoplasia Press 2015
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4700294/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26692530
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.tranon.2015.11.004
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author Mang, Josef
Korzeniewski, Nina
Dietrich, Dimo
Sailer, Verena
Tolstov, Yanis
Searcy, Sam
von Hardenberg, Jost
Perner, Sven
Kristiansen, Glen
Marx, Alexander
Roth, Wilfried
Herpel, Esther
Grüllich, Carsten
Popeneciu, Valentin
Pahernik, Sascha
Hadaschik, Boris
Hohenfellner, Markus
Duensing, Stefan
author_facet Mang, Josef
Korzeniewski, Nina
Dietrich, Dimo
Sailer, Verena
Tolstov, Yanis
Searcy, Sam
von Hardenberg, Jost
Perner, Sven
Kristiansen, Glen
Marx, Alexander
Roth, Wilfried
Herpel, Esther
Grüllich, Carsten
Popeneciu, Valentin
Pahernik, Sascha
Hadaschik, Boris
Hohenfellner, Markus
Duensing, Stefan
author_sort Mang, Josef
collection PubMed
description We have recently shown that centrosomal protein 57 (CEP57) is overexpressed in a subset of human prostate cancers. CEP57 is involved in intracellular transport processes, and its overexpression causes mitotic defects as well as abnormal microtubule nucleation and bundling. In the present study, we further characterized the prognostic and functional role of CEP57 in prostate cancer. Unexpectedly, we found that high CEP57 expression is an independent prognostic factor for a more favorable biochemical recurrence-free survival in two large patient cohorts. To reconcile this finding with the ability of CEP57 to cause cell division errors and thus potentially promote malignant progression, we hypothesized that alterations of microtubule-associated transport processes, in particular nuclear translocation of the androgen receptor (AR), may play a role in our finding. However, CEP57 overexpression and microtubule bundling had, surprisingly, no effect on the nuclear translocation of the AR. Instead, we found a significant increase of cells with disarranged microtubules and a cellular morphology suggestive of a cytokinesis defect. Because mitotic dysfunction leads to a reduced daughter cell formation, it can explain the survival benefit of patients with increased CEP57 expression. In contrast, we show that a reduced expression of CEP57 is associated with malignant growth and metastasis. Taken together, our findings underscore that high CEP57 expression is associated with mitotic impairment and less aggressive tumor behavior. Because the CEP57-induced microtubule stabilization had no detectable effect on AR nuclear translocation, our results furthermore suggest that microtubule-targeting therapeutics used in advanced prostate cancer such as docetaxel may have modes of action that are at least in part independent of AR transport inhibition.
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spelling pubmed-47002942016-02-01 Prognostic Significance and Functional Role of CEP57 in Prostate Cancer() Mang, Josef Korzeniewski, Nina Dietrich, Dimo Sailer, Verena Tolstov, Yanis Searcy, Sam von Hardenberg, Jost Perner, Sven Kristiansen, Glen Marx, Alexander Roth, Wilfried Herpel, Esther Grüllich, Carsten Popeneciu, Valentin Pahernik, Sascha Hadaschik, Boris Hohenfellner, Markus Duensing, Stefan Transl Oncol Original article We have recently shown that centrosomal protein 57 (CEP57) is overexpressed in a subset of human prostate cancers. CEP57 is involved in intracellular transport processes, and its overexpression causes mitotic defects as well as abnormal microtubule nucleation and bundling. In the present study, we further characterized the prognostic and functional role of CEP57 in prostate cancer. Unexpectedly, we found that high CEP57 expression is an independent prognostic factor for a more favorable biochemical recurrence-free survival in two large patient cohorts. To reconcile this finding with the ability of CEP57 to cause cell division errors and thus potentially promote malignant progression, we hypothesized that alterations of microtubule-associated transport processes, in particular nuclear translocation of the androgen receptor (AR), may play a role in our finding. However, CEP57 overexpression and microtubule bundling had, surprisingly, no effect on the nuclear translocation of the AR. Instead, we found a significant increase of cells with disarranged microtubules and a cellular morphology suggestive of a cytokinesis defect. Because mitotic dysfunction leads to a reduced daughter cell formation, it can explain the survival benefit of patients with increased CEP57 expression. In contrast, we show that a reduced expression of CEP57 is associated with malignant growth and metastasis. Taken together, our findings underscore that high CEP57 expression is associated with mitotic impairment and less aggressive tumor behavior. Because the CEP57-induced microtubule stabilization had no detectable effect on AR nuclear translocation, our results furthermore suggest that microtubule-targeting therapeutics used in advanced prostate cancer such as docetaxel may have modes of action that are at least in part independent of AR transport inhibition. Neoplasia Press 2015-12-12 /pmc/articles/PMC4700294/ /pubmed/26692530 http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.tranon.2015.11.004 Text en © 2015 The Authors http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/ This is an open access article under the CC BY-NC-ND license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/).
spellingShingle Original article
Mang, Josef
Korzeniewski, Nina
Dietrich, Dimo
Sailer, Verena
Tolstov, Yanis
Searcy, Sam
von Hardenberg, Jost
Perner, Sven
Kristiansen, Glen
Marx, Alexander
Roth, Wilfried
Herpel, Esther
Grüllich, Carsten
Popeneciu, Valentin
Pahernik, Sascha
Hadaschik, Boris
Hohenfellner, Markus
Duensing, Stefan
Prognostic Significance and Functional Role of CEP57 in Prostate Cancer()
title Prognostic Significance and Functional Role of CEP57 in Prostate Cancer()
title_full Prognostic Significance and Functional Role of CEP57 in Prostate Cancer()
title_fullStr Prognostic Significance and Functional Role of CEP57 in Prostate Cancer()
title_full_unstemmed Prognostic Significance and Functional Role of CEP57 in Prostate Cancer()
title_short Prognostic Significance and Functional Role of CEP57 in Prostate Cancer()
title_sort prognostic significance and functional role of cep57 in prostate cancer()
topic Original article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4700294/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26692530
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.tranon.2015.11.004
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