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Epithelial mesenchymal-like transition occurs in a subset of cells in castration resistant prostate cancer bone metastases

Authors :
Jason H. Bielas
Bryce Lakely
Roger Coleman
Martine Roudier
Melanie Ketchanji
Robert L. Vessella
Hung-Ming Lam
Colm Morrissey
Paul H. Lange
Nolan G. Ericson
Bruce Montgomery
Belinda Nghiem
Ilsa Coleman
Xiaotun Zhang
Celestia S. Higano
Lawrence D. True
Peter S. Nelson
Maahum Haider
Lisha G. Brown
Source :
Clinical & Experimental Metastasis. 33:239-248
Publication Year :
2015
Publisher :
Springer Science and Business Media LLC, 2015.

Abstract

TGFβ is a known driver of epithelial-mesenchymal transition (EMT) which is associated with tumor aggressiveness and metastasis. However, EMT has not been fully explored in clinical specimens of castration-resistant prostate cancer (CRPC) metastases. To assess EMT in CRPC, gene expression analysis was performed on 149 visceral and bone metastases from 62 CRPC patients and immunohistochemical analysis was performed on 185 CRPC bone and visceral metastases from 42 CRPC patients. In addition, to assess the potential of metastases to seed further metastases the mitochondrial genome was sequenced at different metastatic sites in one patient. TGFβ was increased in bone versus visceral metastases. While primarily cytoplasmic; nuclear and cytoplasmic Twist were significantly higher in bone than in visceral metastases. Slug and Zeb1 were unchanged, with the exception of nuclear Zeb1 being significantly higher in visceral metastases. Importantly, nuclear Twist, Slug, and Zeb1 were only present in a subset of epithelial cells that had an EMT-like phenotype. Underscoring the relevance of EMT-like cells, mitochondrial sequencing revealed that metastases could seed additional metastases in the same patient. In conclusion, while TGFβ expression and EMT-associated protein expression is present in a considerable number of CRPC visceral and bone metastases, nuclear Twist, Slug, and Zeb1 localization and an EMT-like phenotype (elongated nuclei and cytoplasmic compartment) was only present in a small subset of CRPC bone metastases. Mitochondrial sequencing from different metastases in a CRPC patient provided evidence for the seeding of metastases from previously established metastases, highlighting the biological relevance of EMT-like behavior in CRPC metastases.

Details

ISSN :
15737276 and 02620898
Volume :
33
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Clinical & Experimental Metastasis
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....0e6b4f0d8d5c8a29298f08abd7e0d221
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1007/s10585-015-9773-7