71 research outputs found
Chronic administration of green tea extract to TRAMP mice induces the collapse of Golgi apparatus in prostate secretory cells and results in alterations of protein post-translational processing.
Considering its long latency, prostate cancer (PCa) represents an ideal target for chemoprevention strategies. Green tea extract (GTE) has been proved to be one of the most promising natural substances capable of inhibiting PCa progression in animal models (transgenic adenocarcinoma of mouse prostate), as well as in humans. However, the cellular targets of the GTE action are mostly unknown. The main objective of this work was to investigate whether the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) and the Golgi apparatus (GA), known to be actively involved in sensing stress stimuli and initiating and propagating cell death signalling, may represent the subcellular targets of GTE action. To this end, 42 TRAMP mice were divided into four experimental groups: groups II and IV, received GTE in tap water (0.3 g/100 ml solution) starting at 8 weeks of age and up to the time of sacrifice. Groups I and III were respective age-matched water-fed controls. The animals were sacrificed after 4 weeks (groups I and II) or 40 weeks of treatment (groups II and IV). We also treated TRAMP-C2 cells with GTE (20 µg/ml for 7 days) to check the expression profile of clusterin (CLU), a protein involved in prostate tumourigenesis, extensively processed through ER-GA before being secreted through the plasma membrane. In vivo we found that chronic administration of GTE in TRAMP mice results in collapse of ER and GA in prostate epithelial cells. Consistently, in vitro we found that the mature, fully processed form of CLU, sCLU, is strongly reduced by GTE treatment in TRAMP-C2 cells. Taking into account the sCLU biogenesis dependence on the ER-GA integrity and the proposed anti-apoptotic role of sCLU, the possibility for GTE to counteract PCa progression by interfering with sCLU biogenesis is suggested
A Novel Gene Signature for Molecular Diagnosis of Human Prostate Cancer by RT-qPCR
Prostate cancer (CaP) is one of the most relevant causes of cancer death in Western Countries. Although detection of CaP at early curable stage is highly desirable, actual screening methods present limitations and new molecular approaches are needed. Gene expression analysis increases our knowledge about the biology of CaP and may render novel molecular tools, but the identification of accurate biomarkers for reliable molecular diagnosis is a real challenge. We describe here the diagnostic power of a novel 8-genes signature: ornithine decarboxylase (ODC), ornithine decarboxylase antizyme (OAZ), adenosylmethionine decarboxylase (AdoMetDC), spermidine/spermine N(1)-acetyltransferase (SSAT), histone H3 (H3), growth arrest specific gene (GAS1), glyceraldehyde 3-phosphate dehydrogenase (GAPDH) and Clusterin (CLU) in tumour detection/classification of human CaP. METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: The 8-gene signature was detected by retrotranscription real-time quantitative PCR (RT-qPCR) in frozen prostate surgical specimens obtained from 41 patients diagnosed with CaP and recommended to undergo radical prostatectomy (RP). No therapy was given to patients at any time before RP. The bio-bank used for the study consisted of 66 specimens: 44 were benign-CaP paired from the same patient. Thirty-five were classified as benign and 31 as CaP after final pathological examination. Only molecular data were used for classification of specimens. The Nearest Neighbour (NN) classifier was used in order to discriminate CaP from benign tissue. Validation of final results was obtained with 10-fold cross-validation procedure. CaP versus benign specimens were discriminated with (80+/-5)% accuracy, (81+/-6)% sensitivity and (78+/-7)% specificity. The method also correctly classified 71% of patients with Gleason score<7 versus > or =7, an important predictor of final outcome. CONCLUSIONS/SIGNIFICANCE: The method showed high sensitivity in a collection of specimens in which a significant portion of the total (13/31, equal to 42%) was considered CaP on the basis of having less than 15% of cancer cells. This result supports the notion of the "cancer field effect", in which transformed cells extend beyond morphologically evident tumour. The molecular diagnosis method here described is objective and less subjected to human error. Although further confirmations are needed, this method poses the potential to enhance conventional diagnosis
Variazioni reciproche nella concentrazione degli RNAm della ornitina decarbossilasi e dell'SGP-2: possibile ruolo nel controllo dell'omeostasi cellulare
Gene expression analysis in combination with clinical parameters is effective in predicting relapse after radical prostatectomy
Increased levels of clusterin (SGP-2) mRNA and protein accompany rat ventral prostate involution following finasteride treatment
Finasteride is a well-known inhibitor of the prostatic enzyme 5 alpha -reductase type 2 which prevents conversion of testosterone into 5 alpha -dihydrotestosterone, the active intraprostatic androgen, which causes prostate involution through a combination of cell atrophy and cell death. The drug is widely used to improve symptoms of benign prostatic hyperplasia in man. Clusterin, a glycoprotein which is generally up-regulated under conditions inducing cell atrophy or organ involution, is produced at a high level in the regressing rat ventral prostate following androgen ablation. According to several authors, clusterin does not respond to finasteride treatment, suggesting a different action of testosterone and 5 alpha -dihydrotestosterone. We show here that, under our conditions, finasteride was capable of inducing production of both clusterin mRNA and protein in the rat ventral prostate. In fact, by using different and converging techniques, such as Northern hybridization, in situ hybridization histochemistry and immunohistochemistry, we were able to show a strong induction of the clusterin gene in the epithelial cell population of the gland. The response to finasteride, which was similar to that seen with castration, occurred with a delay of a few days. In situ and immunohistochemistry experiments indicated that both orchidectomy and finasteride administration resulted in increased transition of the epithelial cells from the columnar to the cuboidal (atrophic) shape, and this was accompanied by an increased intensity of the signal for clusterin. Thus, it appears that induction of clusterin is part of the molecular process leading to prostate involution caused by either orchidectomy or finasteride administration
Changes in prostate polyamine metabolism by green tea catechins in autochtonous mouse model of prostate cancer (TRAMP mice)
Gene relaxation and aging: Changes in the abundance of rat ventral prostate SGP-2 (clusterin) and ornithine decarboxylase mRNAs
AbstractSulfated glycoprotein 2 (SGP-2) mRNA progressively increased in the ventral prostate of the aging rat, reaching, at 24 months, 4-fold higher than at 3 months. Ornithine decarboxylase (ODC) mRNA peaked at 6 months (4-fold increase), and at 12 and 24 months was maintained at higher levels than at 3 months. ODC enzymatic activity was enhanced at 6 months to a much smaller extent than its own mRNA, the values at 12 and 24 months dropping to below those at 3 months. Putrescine (Put), spermidine (Spd) and spermine (Sp) concentrations also peaked at 6 months (100% increase for Put, 50% for Sp and Spd). At 24 months, Put and Spd were diminished, and Sp was unchanged with respect to the 3-month values. Under the same conditions, glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase mRNA did not undergo significant alterations
Cisplatin-resistance modulates the effect of protein synthesis inhibitors on spermidine/spermine N1-acetyltransferase expression
Changes in the levels of the mRNAs coding for SGP-2 (clusterin), ornithine decarboxylase and gliceraldeyde-3-phosphate drogenase in the testis and ventral prostate of the aging rat
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