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Calcitonin receptor is required for T-antigen-induced prostate carcinogenesis

Expression of calcitonin (CT) and its receptor (CTR) is frequently elevated in prostate cancer (PC) and activation of CT–CTR axis in non- invasive PC cells induces an invasive phenotype. However, the role of CT-CTR axis in prostate carcinogenesis has not been investigated. We employed a transgenic m...

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Autores principales: Kale, Ajay, Aldahish, Afaf, Shah, Girish
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Impact Journals LLC 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7061735/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32180899
http://dx.doi.org/10.18632/oncotarget.27495
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author Kale, Ajay
Aldahish, Afaf
Shah, Girish
author_facet Kale, Ajay
Aldahish, Afaf
Shah, Girish
author_sort Kale, Ajay
collection PubMed
description Expression of calcitonin (CT) and its receptor (CTR) is frequently elevated in prostate cancer (PC) and activation of CT–CTR axis in non- invasive PC cells induces an invasive phenotype. However, the role of CT-CTR axis in prostate carcinogenesis has not been investigated. We employed a transgenic mouse prostate cancer model that uses long probasin promoter to target the expression of T-antigen in the prostate gland (LPB-Tag) along with CTR knock-out mice (CTRKO) to address this question. We cross-bred LPB-Tag mice with CTRKO to obtain four groups of mice. Prostates of these mice were obtained at the age of 90 days, fixed, paraffin-embedded, and used either for the extraction of RNA or for immunofluorescence. Prostate RNAs from different groups were reverse transcribed and used either for transcription profiling or for qRT-PCR. As expected, prostates of mice with LPB-Tag genotype displayed well-grown tumors with histologic features such as loss of normal morphology and nuclear atypia. WT as well as CTRKO mice displayed normal prostate morphology. Interestingly, LPB-Tag-CTRKO prostates also displayed relatively normal morphology which was indistinguishable from the WT. Microarray analysis as well as qRT-PCR suggested that CTRKO genotype reversed T-antigen-induced silencing of RB and PTEN gene expression as well as T-antigen-induced expression of several enzymes associated with lipid metabolism/ cholesterol biosynthesis, several cancer-related and androgen-regulated genes. The results for the first time identify mechanisms associated CTR-induced prostate carcinogenesis, and raise an exciting possibility of using a potent CT antagonist to attenuate progression of prostate cancer.
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spelling pubmed-70617352020-03-16 Calcitonin receptor is required for T-antigen-induced prostate carcinogenesis Kale, Ajay Aldahish, Afaf Shah, Girish Oncotarget Research Paper Expression of calcitonin (CT) and its receptor (CTR) is frequently elevated in prostate cancer (PC) and activation of CT–CTR axis in non- invasive PC cells induces an invasive phenotype. However, the role of CT-CTR axis in prostate carcinogenesis has not been investigated. We employed a transgenic mouse prostate cancer model that uses long probasin promoter to target the expression of T-antigen in the prostate gland (LPB-Tag) along with CTR knock-out mice (CTRKO) to address this question. We cross-bred LPB-Tag mice with CTRKO to obtain four groups of mice. Prostates of these mice were obtained at the age of 90 days, fixed, paraffin-embedded, and used either for the extraction of RNA or for immunofluorescence. Prostate RNAs from different groups were reverse transcribed and used either for transcription profiling or for qRT-PCR. As expected, prostates of mice with LPB-Tag genotype displayed well-grown tumors with histologic features such as loss of normal morphology and nuclear atypia. WT as well as CTRKO mice displayed normal prostate morphology. Interestingly, LPB-Tag-CTRKO prostates also displayed relatively normal morphology which was indistinguishable from the WT. Microarray analysis as well as qRT-PCR suggested that CTRKO genotype reversed T-antigen-induced silencing of RB and PTEN gene expression as well as T-antigen-induced expression of several enzymes associated with lipid metabolism/ cholesterol biosynthesis, several cancer-related and androgen-regulated genes. The results for the first time identify mechanisms associated CTR-induced prostate carcinogenesis, and raise an exciting possibility of using a potent CT antagonist to attenuate progression of prostate cancer. Impact Journals LLC 2020-03-03 /pmc/articles/PMC7061735/ /pubmed/32180899 http://dx.doi.org/10.18632/oncotarget.27495 Text en http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/ Copyright: Kale et al. This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License 3.0 (CC BY 3.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Paper
Kale, Ajay
Aldahish, Afaf
Shah, Girish
Calcitonin receptor is required for T-antigen-induced prostate carcinogenesis
title Calcitonin receptor is required for T-antigen-induced prostate carcinogenesis
title_full Calcitonin receptor is required for T-antigen-induced prostate carcinogenesis
title_fullStr Calcitonin receptor is required for T-antigen-induced prostate carcinogenesis
title_full_unstemmed Calcitonin receptor is required for T-antigen-induced prostate carcinogenesis
title_short Calcitonin receptor is required for T-antigen-induced prostate carcinogenesis
title_sort calcitonin receptor is required for t-antigen-induced prostate carcinogenesis
topic Research Paper
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7061735/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32180899
http://dx.doi.org/10.18632/oncotarget.27495
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