Medical College of Wisconsin
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Prostate cancer invasion is influenced more by expression of a CD44 isoform including variant 9 than by Muc18. Lab Invest 2004 Jul;84(7):894-907

Date

04/27/2004

Pubmed ID

15107804

DOI

10.1038/labinvest.3700112

Scopus ID

2-s2.0-3042547725 (requires institutional sign-in at Scopus site)   59 Citations

Abstract

The standard form of cell adhesion glycoprotein CD44 is a metastasis suppressor in prostate cancer. However, we previously showed by RT-PCR and Western blotting that cancer overexpresses unique CD44 variant v7-v10 isoforms. Muc18 is another cell adhesion marker reportedly overexpressed by prostate cancer. Matched frozen section-confirmed tumor and benign tissues were harvested from 10 prostatectomy specimens and tumor was microdissected from two lymph node metastases. Tissues were homogenized for RNA preparations, and RT-PCR was performed for the CD44v7-v10 sequence. In cultured prostate cancer cells, we caused RNA interference against CD44v9 and/or Muc18. We used PC3M cells and a derivative cell line called G(s)alpha, that constitutively expresses this G-protein and is more invasive. Lipofection was performed for a green fluorescent protein plasmid and for two 22-mer DNA fragments, cloned into a plasmid expression vector to generate hairpin, interfering dsRNA. Assays for invasion into Matrigel, a basement membrane matrix, were performed in 4-5 experiments. RT-PCR demonstrated expression of a 608 bp band representing CD44v7-v10 or a 638 bp band of CD44v6-v10 in prostate cancer tissues and metastases but not benign tissue. Cultured G(s)alpha cells overexpressed CD44v9 by comparison with PC3M cells. At 90 h after 6-hour lipofection, protein silencing was evident by Western blots. Silencing the CD44v9 expression reduced invasiveness into Matrigel to 21.6+/-7.0% in PC3M cells (P<0.001) and 31.2+/-18.3% in G(s)alpha cells (P=0.001), compared to cells exposed to transfection vehicle alone. Silencing Muc18 expression reduced invasiveness to 76.9+/-13.5% of the control value in PC3M cells (P<0.05) and 84.8+/-29.9% in G(s)alpha cells (P=0.18). Prostate cancer invasion is facilitated more by its overexpression of CD44 variant 9 than by Muc18. Its relative overexpression by G(s)alpha cells is a novel finding, suggesting a link between signal transduction and cell adhesion marker expression.

Author List

Omara-Opyene AL, Qiu J, Shah GV, Iczkowski KA



MESH terms used to index this publication - Major topics in bold

Antigens, CD
CD146 Antigen
Cell Line, Tumor
Humans
Hyaluronan Receptors
Immunohistochemistry
Male
Membrane Glycoproteins
Neoplasm Invasiveness
Neural Cell Adhesion Molecules
Prostatic Neoplasms
RNA Interference
Reverse Transcriptase Polymerase Chain Reaction