选用 RWPE-1 与其他前列腺相关细胞的原因、作用、功能及相互作用
RWPE-1 作为前列腺上皮生理与病理研究的核心基准模型
该组文献确立了RWPE-1作为非肿瘤、永生化前列腺上皮细胞的标杆地位,重点关注其在基础生物学特征、基因调控、致癌转化过程及药理学对照中的应用。
- Immortalized and tumorigenic adult human prostatic epithelial cell lines: Characteristics and applications part I. Cell markers and immortalized nontumorigenic cell lines(Mukta M. Webber, Diana Bello, Salmaan Quader, 1996, The Prostate)
- Human cell lines as an in vitro/in vivo model for prostate carcinogenesis and progression(M. Webber, S. Quader, H. Kleinman, D. Bello‐DeOcampo, P. Storto, Gillian Bice, Wanderley DeMendonca‐Calaca, Daniel E. Williams, 2001, The Prostate)
- Finasteride Inhibits Human Prostate Cancer Cell Invasion through MMP2 and MMP9 Downregulation(Andrei Moroz, F. K. Delella, Rodrigo Almeida, L. M. Lacorte, W. Fávaro, E. Deffune, S. Felisbino, 2013, PLoS ONE)
- Basal and metal‐induced expression of metallothionein isoform 1 and 2 genes in the RWPE‐1 human prostate epithelial cell line(Amy L. Albrecht, R. Singh, S. Somji, M. Sens, D. Sens, S. Garrett, 2008, Journal of Applied Toxicology)
- The effects of metformin and simvastatin on the growth of LNCaP and RWPE-1 prostate epithelial cell lines.(P. Pennanen, H. Syvälä, M. Bläuer, K. Savinainen, T. Ylikomi, T. Tammela, T. Murtola, 2016, European Journal of Pharmacology)
- Characterization of the Peroxisomal Proteome and Redox Balance in Human Prostate Cancer Cell Lines(Mohamed A. F. Hussein, Celien Lismont, Cláudio F. Costa, Hongli Li, F. Claessens, Marc Fransen, 2024, Antioxidants)
- Prostate specific antigen and androgen receptor induction and characterization of an immortalized adult human prostatic epithelial cell line.(M. Webber, D. Bello, H. Kleinman, D. D. Wartinger, Daniel E. Williams, J. Rhim, 1996, Carcinogenesis)
- The role of α6β1 integrin and EGF in normal and malignant acinar morphogenesis of human prostatic epithelial cells(D. Bello‐DeOcampo, H. Kleinman, M. Webber, 2001, Mutation Research - Fundamental and Molecular Mechanisms of Mutagenesis)
- Metabolic signatures of malignant progression in prostate epithelial cells.(O. Teahan, C. Bevan, J. Waxman, H. Keun, 2011, The International Journal of Biochemistry & Cell Biology)
- Effect of n-3 and n-6 unsaturated fatty acids on prostate cancer (PC-3) and prostate epithelial (RWPE-1) cells in vitro(Hongzhou Meng, Yuzhen Shen, Junhui Shen, F-X Zhou, Shengrong Shen, U. Das, 2013, Lipids in Health and Disease)
- Acinar differentiation by non-malignant immortalized human prostatic epithelial cells and its loss by malignant cells.(Mukta M. Webber, D. Bello, H. Kleinman, M. P. Hoffman, 1997, Carcinogenesis)
- The role of chromodomain helicase DNA binding protein 1 (CHD1) in promoting an invasive prostate cancer phenotype(A. Kareddula, D. Medina, Whitney Petrosky, S. Dolfi, I. Tereshchenko, K. Walton, H. Aviv, Evita T. Sadimin, Alexandra L. Tabakin, E. Singer, K. Hirshfield, 2021, Therapeutic Advances in Urology)
- In vivo biomarker expression patterns are preserved in 3D cultures of Prostate Cancer.(L. Windus, D. L. Kiss, T. Glover, V. Avery, 2012, Experimental Cell Research)
- Arsenite malignantly transforms human prostate epithelial cells in vitro by gene amplification of mutated KRAS(B. Alex, MerrickID, Dhiral P. Phadke, Meredith A. Bostrom, Ruchir R. Shah, Garron, M. Wright, Xinguo Wang, Oksana Gordon, E. Katherine, PelchID, S. Auerbach, R. Paules, M. DeVito, M. Waalkes, E. Tokar, 2019, PLOS ONE)
- Tumorigenic transformation of human prostatic epithelial cell line RWPE‐1 by growth hormone‐releasing hormone (GHRH)(Laura Muñoz-Moreno, M. J. Carmena, J. Prieto, A. Schally, A. Bajo, 2022, The Prostate)
- Estradiol promotes epithelial‐to‐mesenchymal transition in human benign prostatic epithelial cells(Xiaoyu Shi, Yanfei Peng, Xiaoling Du, HaiTao Liu, H. Klocker, Qimei Lin, Jiandang Shi, Ju Zhang, 2017, The Prostate)
- Human Prostate Cell Lines Mimic Heterogeneity of Cadherin Expression in Human Prostate Cancer(W. Achanzar, P. Lamar, E. Tokar, Amanda S. Rivette, D. Bello‐DeOcampo, W. Prozialeck, M. Webber, M. Waalkes, 2004, UroOncology)
- KRAS-retroviral fusion transcripts and gene amplification in arsenic-transformed, human prostate CAsE-PE cancer cells.(B. Merrick, Dhiral P. Phadke, Meredith A. Bostrom, Ruchir R. Shah, Garron M. Wright, Xinguo Wang, Oksana Gordon, Katherine E. Pelch, S. Auerbach, R. Paules, M. DeVito, M. Waalkes, E. Tokar, 2020, Toxicology and Applied Pharmacology)
- Regulation of prostate cell growth and morphogenesis by Dickkopf-3(Y. Kawano, M. Kitaoka, Y. Hamada, Marjorie M. Walker, J. Waxman, R. Kypta, 2006, Oncogene)
- Abi1 loss drives prostate tumorigenesis through activation of EMT and non-canonical WNT signaling(Disharee Nath, Xiang Li, Claudia Mondragon, D. Post, Ming Chen, Julie R. White, A. Hryniewicz-Jankowska, T. Caza, V. Kuznetsov, Heidi Hehnly, T. Jamaspishvili, D. Berman, Fan Zhang, Sonia H Y Kung, L. Fazli, M. Gleave, G. Bratslavsky, P. Pandolfi, L. Kotula, 2019, Cell Communication and Signaling)
- Regulation of cell‐to‐cell communication in non‐tumorigenic and malignant human prostate epithelial cells(G. Carruba, M. Webber, S. Quader, M. Amoroso, L. Cocciadiferro, F. Saladino, J. Trosko, L. Castagnetta, 2002, The Prostate)
- Genistein modulates prostate epithelial cell proliferation via estrogen- and extracellular signal-regulated kinase-dependent pathways.(Xingya Wang, Elizabeth A. Clubbs, J. Bomser, 2006, The Journal of Nutritional Biochemistry)
- HGF and the regulation of tight junctions in human prostate cancer cells.(T. Martin, M. Mason, W. Jiang, 2014, Oncology Reports)
- Differentially Expressed Androgen-Regulated Genes in Androgen-Sensitive Tissues Reveal Potential Biomarkers of Early Prostate Cancer(D. Altintas, N. Allioli, M. Decaussin, Simon de Bernard, A. Ruffion, J. Samarut, V. Vlaeminck-Guillem, 2013, PLoS ONE)
- Zinc transporter mRNA expression in the RWPE-1 human prostate epithelial cell line(Amy L. Albrecht, S. Somji, M. Sens, D. Sens, S. Garrett, 2008, BioMetals)
- Negation of the cancer-preventive actions of selenium by over-expression of protein kinase Cepsilon and selenoprotein thioredoxin reductase.(U. Gundimeda, J. Schiffman, Simcha Neeli Gottlieb, Brandon Roth, R. Gopalakrishna, 2009, Carcinogenesis)
- Selective Growth Inhibition of Prostate Cancer Cell Lines by an Oleandrigenin-Related Androstane Derivative(Martina Peřinová, Jana Steigerová, Marie Kvasnicová, Zlata Rychnovská, Tereza Kašparová, Tereza Štenclová, Lucie Rárová, Karol Michalak, Jerzy Wicha, Miroslav Strnad, 2024, SSRN Electronic Journal)
- Mutant epidermal growth factor receptor vIII increases cell motility and clonogenecity in a prostate cell line RWPE1(M. He, C. Young, 2009, Journal of Endocrinological Investigation)
- Differential expression of steroid 5alpha-reductase isozymes and association with disease severity and angiogenic genes predict their biological role in prostate cancer.(K. Das, P. Lorena, Lai Kuan Ng, D. Lim, Liang Shen, W. Siow, M. Teh, J. Reichardt, M. Salto‐Tellez, 2010, Endocrine-Related Cancer)
- Androgen responsive adult human prostatic epithelial cell lines immortalized by human papillomavirus 18.(D. Bello, M. Webber, H. Kleinman, D. D. Wartinger, J. Rhim, 1997, Carcinogenesis)
- Glycosylation potential of human prostate cancer cell lines(Yin Gao, V. Chachadi, P. Cheng, I. Brockhausen, 2012, Glycoconjugate Journal)
- In search of the correlation between nanomechanical and biomolecular properties of prostate cancer cells with different metastatic potential.(K. Pogoda, E. Pięta, Maciej Roman, N. Piergies, D. Liberda, T. Wróbel, P. Janmey, C. Paluszkiewicz, W. Kwiatek, 2020, Archives of Biochemistry and Biophysics)
- Establishment of a novel immortalized human prostatic epithelial cell line stably expressing androgen receptor and its application for the functional screening of androgen receptor modulators.(Shan Yu, Ming-Wei Wang, X. Yao, F. Chan, 2009, Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications)
- Hydralazine and Panobinostat Attenuate Malignant Properties of Prostate Cancer Cell Lines(M. Pacheco, V. Camilo, N. Lopes, Filipa Moreira-Silva, M. Correia, R. Henrique, C. Jerónimo, 2021, Pharmaceuticals)
- Testis specific Y-like 5: gene expression, methylation and implications for drug sensitivity in prostate carcinoma(Senthil R Kumar, J. Bryan, M. Esebua, J. Amos-Landgraf, T. May, 2017, BMC Cancer)
- Acquisition of Androgen Independence by Human Prostate Epithelial Cells during Arsenic-Induced Malignant Transformation(L. Benbrahim-Tallaa, M. Webber, M. Waalkes, 2005, Environmental Health Perspectives)
- Vasoactive intestinal peptide (VIP) induces malignant transformation of the human prostate epithelial cell line RWPE-1.(Ana B Fernández-Martínez, A. Bajo, M. Isabel Arenas, M. Sánchez-chapado, J. Prieto, M. Carmena, 2010, Cancer Letters)
- The Adherent/Invasive Escherichia coli Strain LF82 Invades and Persists in Human Prostate Cell Line RWPE-1, Activating a Strong Inflammatory Response(M. P. Conte, Marta Aleandri, M. Marazzato, A. L. Conte, C. Ambrosi, M. Nicoletti, C. Zagaglia, G. Gambara, F. Palombi, P. De Cesaris, E. Ziparo, A. Palamara, A. Riccioli, C. Longhi, 2016, Infection and Immunity)
- Phenotypic and genotypic characterization of commonly used human prostatic cell lines(S. Mitchell, P. Abel, M. Ware, G. Stamp, E. Lalani, 2000, BJU International)
- Laminin-1 and ?6?1 integrin regulate acinar morphogenesis of normal and malignant human prostate epithelial cells(Diana Bello-DeOcampo, Hynda K. Kleinman, Nestor D. Deocampo, Mukta M. Webber, 2001, The Prostate)
- Prostate cell lines as models for biomarker discovery: Performance of current markers and the search for new biomarkers(Ian R. D. Johnson, E. Parkinson-Lawrence, L. Butler, D. Brooks, 2014, The Prostate)
- Stem/progenitor and intermediate cell types and the origin of human prostate cancer.(E. Tokar, Brooke B. Ancrile, G. Cunha, M. Webber, 2005, Differentiation)
- Regulation of PSA secretion and survival signaling by calcium‐independent phopholipase A2β in prostate cancer cells(T. Nicotera, David P Schuster, M. Bourhim, K. Chadha, Gary Klaich, D. Corral, 2009, The Prostate)
前列腺微环境与上皮-间质交互作用机制
本组文献探讨了前列腺微环境内不同细胞系(特别是RWPE-1与WPMY-1)之间的相互作用,重点研究外泌体、激素及基质交互在EMT、纤维化及病理演变中的调节机制。
- Culture requirements of prostatic epithelial cell lines for acinar morphogenesis and lumen formation in vitro: Role of extracellular calcium(D. Tyson, J. Inokuchi, T. Tsunoda, Alice L. Lau, D. Ornstein, 2007, The Prostate)
- Exosomes Derived From Calycosin‐Exposed Prostate Stromal Cells Inhibit Lipopolysaccharide‐Induced Epithelial Cells Inflammatory Injury(Ming Li, Wenping Yao, Yingying Sun, Heng Wang, 2025, American Journal of Reproductive Immunology)
- The exosome-like vesicles derived from androgen exposed-prostate stromal cells promote epithelial cells proliferation and epithelial-mesenchymal transition.(Jinglou Chen, Nan Rong, Min Liu, Congyue Xu, Q. Xiong, Yong-fang Lei, 2020, Toxicology and Applied Pharmacology)
- Impact of aging endocrine milieu on prostate stromal-epithelial interactions(A Nagesh, Ankit Roy Choudhury, Nandana Devi, Surabhi Gupta, PradeepKumar Chaturvedi, Neeraj Kumar, Deepak Pandey, 2024, Research Square)
- Modulatory effect of aquaporin 5 on estrogen-induced epithelial-mesenchymal transition in prostate epithelial cells(Yu Fan, T. Song, Q. Wei, Lu Yang, Tao Lin, Xiaobing Feng, Xianding Wang, Zhong-li Huang, S. Feng, 2020, Chinese Medical Journal)
- The therapeutic effects of docosahexaenoic acid on oestrogen/androgen-induced benign prostatic hyperplasia in rats.(Chao Wang, F. Luo, Ying Zhou, Xiaoling Du, Jiandang Shi, Xiaoling Zhao, Yong Xu, Yan Zhu, W. Hong, Ju Zhang, 2016, Experimental Cell Research)
- A human prostatic stromal myofibroblast cell line WPMY-1: a model for stromal-epithelial interactions in prostatic neoplasia.(M. Webber, N. Trakul, Peter S. Thraves, D. Bello‐DeOcampo, William W. Chu, P. Storto, T. Huard, J. S. Rhim, Daniel E. Williams, 1999, Carcinogenesis)
- Analysis of gene expression in prostate cancer epithelial and interstitial stromal cells using laser capture microdissection(Jennifer L. Gregg, K. Brown, Eric M. Mintz, H. Piontkivska, G. Fraizer, 2010, BMC Cancer)
- The exosome-circ_0001359 derived from cigarette smoke exposed-prostate stromal cells promotes epithelial cells collagen deposition and primary ciliogenesis.(Jinglou Chen, Nan Rong, Min Liu, Congyue Xu, Jing Guo, 2021, Toxicology and Applied Pharmacology)
- A human-derived prostate co-culture microtissue model using epithelial (RWPE-1) and stromal (WPMY-1) cell lines.(M. Dent, Samantha J. Madnick, S. Hall, M. Vantangoli Policelli, Chloé Bars, Hui Li, A. Amin, P. Carmichael, F. Martin, K. Boekelheide, 2019, Toxicology in Vitro)
- Baicalin alleviates benign prostate hyperplasia through androgen-dependent apoptosis(Bo-Ram Jin, Hyo-Jin An, 2020, Aging)
- GV1001 interacts with androgen receptor to inhibit prostate cell proliferation in benign prostatic hyperplasia by regulating expression of molecules related to epithelial-mesenchymal transition(Yejin Kim, Dahae Lee, Hyejung Jo, Cheolhyeon Go, Jongwon Yang, D. Kang, J. Kang, 2021, Aging)
肿瘤细胞系分类、比较评价与模型局限性探讨
此类文献系统评估了临床常见前列腺癌细胞系(如PC3、LNCaP、DU145)与RWPE-1在异质性、侵袭性及转移特性上的差异,讨论了构建高临床相关性模型的局限与必要性。
- A Role for Polyploidy in the Tumorigenicity of Pim-1-Expressing Human Prostate and Mammary Epithelial Cells(M. Roh, O. Franco, S. Hayward, R. van der Meer, S. Abdulkadir, 2008, PLoS ONE)
- Characterisation of cell lines derived from prostate cancer patients with localised disease(Leire Moya, C. Walpole, F. Rae, Srilakshmi Srinivasan, I. Seim, J. Lai, D. Nicol, E. Williams, Judith A. Clements, J. Batra, 2023, Prostate Cancer and Prostatic Diseases)
- Could the kinetin riboside be used to inhibit human prostate cell epithelial–mesenchymal transition?(J. Dulińska-Litewka, Bartosz Gąsiorkiewicz, Aleksandra Litewka, D. Gil, T. Golabek, K. Okoń, 2020, Medical Oncology)
- Role of green tea catechins in modulating stromal-epithelial interaction in prostate cells(N Devi, AM Nagesh, MA Jala, S Gupta, 2023, Indian Journal of Natural Products and Resources)
- Effects of Artesunate with Paclitaxel on the Proliferation and Morphology of Androgen‐sensitive (LNCaP), Androgen‐insensitive (PC‐3) Human Prostate Cancer Cell Lines and Normal Epithelial Prostate cell line (RWPE‐1)(Dolapo Adedeji, J. Fabian, A. Adedeji, Gloria Payne, 2020, The FASEB Journal)
- Transcriptional Regulation of RKIP Expression by Androgen in Prostate Cells(Honglai Zhang, Jianguo Wu, Jill M. Keller, K. Yeung, E. Keller, Zheng Fu, 2012, Cellular Physiology and Biochemistry)
- Statins reduce the androgen sensitivity and cell proliferation by decreasing the androgen receptor protein in prostate cancer cells(A. Yokomizo, M. Shiota, E. Kashiwagi, K. Kuroiwa, K. Tatsugami, J. Inokuchi, A. Takeuchi, S. Naito, 2011, The Prostate)
- Establishment and characterization of an immortalized but non-transformed human prostate epithelial cell line: BPH-1(S. Hayward, R. Dahiya, G. Cunha, J. Bartek, N. Deshpande, P. Narayan, 2007, In Vitro Cellular & Developmental Biology - Animal)
- Primary cell cultures as models of prostate cancer development.(D. Peehl, 2005, Endocrine-Related Cancer)
- Phenotypic characterization of telomerase-immortalized primary non-malignant and malignant tumor-derived human prostate epithelial cell lines.(Yongpeng Gu, Hongzhen Li, J. Miki, Kee-Hong Kim, B. Furusato, I. Sesterhenn, W. Chu, D. Mcleod, S. Srivastava, C. Ewing, W. Isaacs, J. Rhim, 2006, Experimental Cell Research)
- Phenotypic characterization of immortalized normal and primary tumor-derived human prostate epithelial cell cultures(Tracy S. Schwab, Tylitha Stewart, Jeff E. Lehr, Kenneth J. Pienta, Johng S. Rhim, Jill A. Macoska, 2000, The Prostate)
- Establishment and characterization of immortalized human cell lines from prostatic carcinoma and benign prostatic hyperplasia.(P. Iype, L. Iype, M. Verma, M. Kaighn, 1998, International Journal of Oncology)
- A conditionally immortalized cell line model for the study of human prostatic epithelial cell differentiation.(B. Daly-Burns, Tahirah N Alam, A. Mackay, Jeremy Clark, Christopher J. Shepherd, S. Rizzo, R. Tatoud, M. O'hare, J. Masters, D. Hudson, 2007, Differentiation)
- Application of Prostate Cancer Models for Preclinical Study: Advantages and Limitations of Cell Lines, Patient-Derived Xenografts, and Three-Dimensional Culture of Patient-Derived Cells(Takeshi Namekawa, K. Ikeda, Kuniko Horie-Inoue, S. Inoue, 2019, Cells)
- Immortalized and tumorigenic adult human prostatic epithelial cell lines: Characteristics and applications part 2. Tumorigenic cell lines(Mukta M. Webber, Diana Bello, Salmaan Quader, 1997, The Prostate)
- Avellanin A Has an Antiproliferative Effect on TP-Induced RWPE-1 Cells via the PI3K-Akt Signalling Pathway(Chang Xu, Guangping Cao, Hong Zhang, Meng Bai, Xiangxi Yi, Xinjian Qu, 2024, Marine Drugs)
- Generation of immortal human prostate cell lines for the study of prostate cancer.(J. Rhim, 2003, Prostate Cancer Methods and Protocols)
- Comparative Cytotoxic Activity of Hydroxytyrosol and Its Semisynthetic Lipophilic Derivatives in Prostate Cancer Cells(A. León-González, P. Sáez-Martínez, J. Jiménez-Vacas, V. Herrero-Aguayo, Antonio J. Montero-Hidalgo, E. Gómez-Gómez, Andrés Madrona, J. Castaño, J. Espartero, M. Gahete, R. Luque, 2021, Antioxidants)
- Evidence of epithelial to mesenchymal transition associated with increased tumorigenic potential in an immortalized normal prostate epithelial cell line(Calin O. Marian, Lin Yang, Y. Zou, Crystal Gore, R. Pong, J. Shay, Wareef Kabbani, J. Hsieh, G. Raj, 2011, The Prostate)
- A telomerase-immortalized primary human prostate cancer clonal cell line with neoplastic phenotypes.(Yongpeng Gu, Kee-Hong Kim, Daejin Ko, Keiichiro Nakamura, Y. Yasunaga, J. Moul, S. Srivastava, P. Arnstein, J. Rhim, 2004, International Journal of Oncology)
- Immortalized and tumorigenic adult human prostatic epithelial cell lines: Characteristics and applications. Part 3. Oncogenes, suppressor genes, and applications(Mukta M. Webber, Diana Bello, Salmaan Quader, 1997, The Prostate)
- Inhibition of prostate cancer cell growth by human secreted PDZ domain-containing protein 2, a potential autocrine prostate tumor suppressor.(C. Tam, A. Cheng, R. Ma, Kwok-Ming Yao, Stephen Y. W. Shiu, 2006, Endocrinology)
- Mini review: Proteases and invasion in human prostate epithelial cell lines: Implications in prostate cancer prevention and intervention(M. Webber, A. Waghray, D. Bello, J. Rhim, 1995, Radiation Oncology Investigations)
- Effects of adipocytes on the proliferation and differentiation of prostate cancer cells in a 3‐D culture model(A. Kaneko, Y. Satoh, Y. Tokuda, C. Fujiyama, Kazuma Udo, J. Uozumi, 2010, International Journal of Urology)
- Splicing variants of versican in CD133+/CD44+ prostate cancer stem cells.(Ş. Ayla, Emre Karakoc, Yasemin Yozgat Byrne, Cuneyd Parlayan, Ilknur Keskin, S. Karahuseyinoglu, Ayşegül Taşkiran, G. Oktem, 2024, Pathology - Research and Practice)
先进体外3D培养与组织重建模型
该组研究专注于利用3D培养技术(如球状体、微组织平台)重构前列腺组织结构,克服传统二维培养局限,以更真实地模拟生理形态发生及药物响应。
- Experimental in vitro, ex vivo and in vivo models in prostate cancer research(V. Sailer, G. von Amsberg, S. Duensing, J. Kirfel, V. Lieb, E. Metzger, A. Offermann, K. Pantel, R. Schuele, H. Taubert, S. Wach, S. Perner, S. Werner, A. Aigner, 2022, Nature Reviews Urology)
- 3D Cultures of Prostate Cancer Cells Cultured in a Novel High-Throughput Culture Platform Are More Resistant to Chemotherapeutics Compared to Cells Cultured in Monolayer(Karen F. Chambers, E. Mosaad, P. Russell, J. Clements, M. Doran, 2014, PLoS ONE)
- A Comprehensive Panel of Three-Dimensional Models for Studies of Prostate Cancer Growth, Invasion and Drug Responses(Ville Härmä, Johannes Virtanen, Rami Mäkelä, A. Happonen, J. Mpindi, M. Knuuttila, P. Kohonen, J. Lötjönen, O. Kallioniemi, M. Nees, 2010, PLoS ONE)
- Development of a three‐dimensional culture model of prostatic epithelial cells and its use for the study of epithelial‐mesenchymal transition and inhibition of PI3K pathway in prostate cancer(J. Chu, Shan Yu, S. Hayward, F. Chan, 2009, The Prostate)
本报告将前列腺研究模型文献归纳为四大逻辑核心:RWPE-1作为非肿瘤基准模型的生物学基础、前列腺上皮与间质间的微环境交互机制、临床肿瘤细胞系的系统比较与局限性分析,以及先进3D体外培养模型的应用趋势。这些维度共同阐述了科研中选用特定细胞系的科学依据,即通过平衡基础对照的严谨性与微环境复杂性的还原,实现对前列腺疾病发生演变及其治疗策略的深度解析。
总计84篇相关文献
… The non-invasive parent RWPE-1 cell line and the highly invasive prostate cancer cell … The colony forming efficiency of MNU cell lines in agar was compared with that of RWPE-1 cells. …
… in The invasive ability RWPE-1 and RWPE-2 cells was compared the loss of p53 protein due to the binding of E6 to p53 leading with that of the prostate carcinoma cell line DU-145 …
… RWPE-2 cells secrete higher levels of gelatinases than their parent RWPE-1 cells. all-trans … Our objectives were 1) to compare levels of urokinase-type plasminogen activator (u-PA) …
… prostate cell line (RWPE-1) could serve as a model system to study the role of zinc in prostate cancer. … genes were elevated in RWPE-1 cells compared to the three prostate cancer cell …
Background Prostate cancer is a broad-spectrum disease, spanning from indolent to a highly aggressive lethal malignancy. Prostate cancer cell lines are essential tools to understanding the basic features of this malignancy, as well as in identifying novel therapeutic strategies. However, most cell lines routinely used in prostate cancer research are derived from metastatic disease and may not fully elucidate the molecular events underlying the early stages of cancer development and progression. Thus, there is a need for new cell lines derived from localised disease to better span the disease spectrum. Methods Prostatic tissue from the primary site, and adjacent non-cancerous tissue was obtained from four patients with localised disease undergoing radical prostatectomy. Epithelial cell outgrowths were immortalised with human papillomavirus type 16 (HPV16) E6 and E7 to establish monoclonal cell lines. Chromosomal ploidy was imaged and STR profiles were determined. Cell morphology, colony formation and cell proliferation characteristics were assessed. Androgen receptor (AR) expression and AR-responsiveness to androgen treatment were analysed by immunofluorescence and RT-qPCR, respectively. RNA-seq analysis was performed to identify prostate lineage markers and expression of prostate cancer tumorigenesis-related genes. Results Two benign cell lines derived from non-cancer cells (AQ0420 and AQ0396) and two tumour tissue derived cancer cell lines (AQ0411 and AQ0415) were immortalised from four patients with localised prostatic adenocarcinoma. The cell lines presented an epithelial morphology and a slow to moderate proliferative rate. None of the cell lines formed anchorage independent colonies or displayed AR-responsiveness. Comparative RNA-seq expression analysis confirmed the prostatic lineage of the four cell lines, with a distinct gene expression profile from that of the metastatic prostate cancer cell lines, PC-3 and LNCaP. Conclusions Comprehensive characterization of these cell lines may provide new in vitro tools that could bridge the current knowledge gap between benign, early-stage and metastatic disease.
… not observed in RWPE-1 cells. These results suggest, that prostate cancer cells may be … effects of metformin and simvastatin compared to normal cells. The data presented here provide …
Growth hormone‐releasing hormone (GHRH) and its receptors have been implicated in the progression of various tumors. In this study, we analyzed the carcinogenetic potential of exposure to GHRH of a nontumor human prostate epithelial cell line (RWPE‐1) as well as its transforming effect in a xenograft model.
Prostate cancer (PCa) is one of the leading causes of death in the elderly men. Polyunsaturated fatty acids (PUFAs) regulate proliferation of cancer cells. In the present study, we evaluated the effect of various PUFAs on the proliferation and survival of human prostate cancer (PC-3) and human prostate epithelial (RWPE-1) cells in vitro.LA, GLA, AA, ALA, EPA and DHA (linoleic acid, gamma-linolenic acid, arachidonic acid, alpha-linolenic acid, eicosapentaenoic acid and docosahexaenoic acid respectively) when tested at 50, 100, 150, and 200 μM inhibited proliferation of RWPE-1 and PC-3 cells, except that lower concentrations of LA (25 μM) and GLA (5, 10 μM) promoted proliferation. Though all fatty acids tested produced changes in the production of interleukin-6 (IL-6), tumor necrosis factor-α (TNF-α), lipoxin A4 and free radical generation by RWPE-1 and PC-3 cells, there were significant differences in their ability to do so. As expected, supplementation of various n-3 and n-6 fatty acids to RWPE-1 and PC-3 cells enhanced the content of the added fatty acids and their long-chain metabolites in these cells. In contrast to previous results, we did not find any direct correlation between inhibition of cell proliferation induced by various fatty acids and free radical generation. These results suggest that polyunsaturated fatty acids suppress proliferation of normal and tumor cells by a variety of mechanisms that may partly depend on the type(s) of cell(s) being tested and the way these fatty acids are handled by the cells. Hence, it is suggested that more deeper and comprehensive studies are needed to understand the actions of fatty acids on the growth of normal and tumor cells.
The carcinogenic potential of vasoactive intestinal peptide (VIP) was analyzed in non-tumor human prostate epithelial cells (RWPE-1) and in vivo xenografts. VIP induced morphological …
… ) of junctional transfer in RWPE-1 cells as compared to control untreated cells, using the SL/… human prostate cancer cell lines [26]. However, using the FRAP analysis, the RWPE-1 cells …
… prostate cancer cell lines (40 and 38 kDa molecular forms) when compared to the nonmalignant cell line RWPE-1 … the nonmalignant RWPE-1 and the prostate cancer cell line CaHPV10 …
… cell cloning of an immortalized, normal human prostate-derived, non-tumorigenic RWPE-1 cell line… Given the differences in the differentiation states and other properties, we believe that …
The development and normal function of prostate tissue depends on signalling interactions between stromal and epithelial compartments. Development of a prostate microtissue composed of these two components can help identify substance exposures that could cause adverse effects in humans as part of a non-animal risk assessment. In this study, prostate microtissues composed of human derived stromal (WPMY-1) and epithelial (RWPE-1) cell lines grown in scaffold-free hydrogels were developed and characterized using immunohistochemistry, light microscopy, and qRT-PCR. Within 5 days after seeding, the microtissues self-organized into spheroids consisting of a core of stromal WPMY-1 cells surrounded by epithelial RWPE-1 cells. The RWPE-1 layer is reflective of intermediate prostatic epithelium, expressing both characteristics of the luminal (high expression of PSA) and basal (high expression of cytokeratins 5/6 and 14) epithelial cells. The response of the microtissues to an androgen (dihydrotestosterone, DHT) and an anti-androgen (flutamide) was also investigated. Treatment with DHT, flutamide or a mixture of DHT and flutamide indicated that the morphology and self-organization of the microtissues is androgen dependent. qRT-PCR data showed that a saturating concentration of DHT increased the expression of genes coding for the estrogen receptors (ESR1 and ESR2) and decreased the expression of CYP1B1 without affecting the expression of the androgen receptor. With further development and optimization RWPE-1/WPMY-1 microtissues can play an important role in non-animal risk assessments.
Prostate cancer (PCa) is associated with disruptions in cellular redox balance. Given the intricate role of peroxisomes in redox metabolism, we conducted comprehensive proteomics analyses to compare peroxisomal and redox protein profiles between benign (RWPE-1) and malignant (22Rv1, LNCaP, and PC3) prostate cell lines. Our analyses revealed significant enrichment of the “peroxisome” pathway among proteins notably upregulated in androgen receptor (AR)-positive cell lines. In addition, catalase (CAT) activity was consistently higher in these malignant cell lines compared to RWPE-1, which contrasts with previous studies reporting lower CAT levels and increased H2O2 levels in PCa tissues compared to adjacent normal tissues. To mimic this clinical scenario, we used RNA interference to knock down CAT expression. Our results show that reduced CAT levels enhanced 22Rv1 and LNCaP cell proliferation. R1881-induced activation of AR, a key driver of PCa, increased expression of the H2O2-producing peroxisomal β-oxidation enzymes acyl-coenzyme A oxidase 1 and 3, reduced CAT expression and activity, and elevated peroxisomal H2O2 levels. Considering these changes and other antioxidant enzyme profile alterations, we propose that enhanced AR activity in PCa reduces CAT function, leading to increased peroxisomal H2O2 levels that trigger adaptive stress responses to promote cell survival, growth, and proliferation.
… was to determine if the RWPE-1 cell line is a good model to … the development of prostate cancer. It was shown that the … in 15 of 45 prostate cancers and there was a significant difference …
… strated that the RWPE-1 cell line, used in the present study, … Human prostate carcinoma cell lines DU-145 and PC-3 were … RWPE-1 cells was compared with that of the tumorigenic cell …
… prostatic epithelial cell phenotype in … prostatic epithelial cells remains undefined. In this study, E2 was identified as a promoter of EMT in the benign prostatic epithelial cell lines RWPE-1 …
ABSTRACT Adherent/invasive Escherichia coli (AIEC) strains have recently been receiving increased attention because they are more prevalent and persistent in the intestine of Crohn's disease (CD) patients than in healthy subjects. Since AIEC strains show a high percentage of similarity to extraintestinal pathogenic E. coli (ExPEC), neonatal meningitis-associated E. coli (NMEC), and uropathogenic E. coli (UPEC) strains, here we compared AIEC strain LF82 with a UPEC isolate (strain EC73) to assess whether LF82 would be able to infect prostate cells as an extraintestinal target. The virulence phenotypes of both strains were determined by using the RWPE-1 prostate cell line. The results obtained indicated that LF82 and EC73 are able to adhere to, invade, and survive within prostate epithelial cells. Invasion was confirmed by immunofluorescence and electron microscopy. Moreover, cytochalasin D and colchicine strongly inhibited bacterial uptake of both strains, indicating the involvement of actin microfilaments and microtubules in host cell invasion. Moreover, both strains belong to phylogenetic group B2 and are strong biofilm producers. In silico analysis reveals that LF82 shares with UPEC strains several virulence factors: namely, type 1 pili, the group II capsule, the vacuolating autotransporter toxin, four iron uptake systems, and the pathogenic island (PAI). Furthermore, compared to EC73, LF82 induces in RWPE-1 cells a marked increase of phosphorylation of mitogen-activated protein kinases (MAPKs) and of NF-κB already by 5 min postinfection, thus inducing a strong inflammatory response. Our in vitro data support the hypothesis that AIEC strains might play a role in prostatitis, and, by exploiting host-cell signaling pathways controlling the innate immune response, likely facilitate bacterial multiplication and dissemination within the male genitourinary tract.
Prognostic markers that can distinguish indolent from aggressive prostate … prostate epithelial cell line, RWPE-1 and two tumourigenic sublines with increasing malignant phenotypes, …
Benign prostatic hyperplasia (BPH) is an age-related disease in men. Mesenchymal /stromal and epithelial cells interactions are essential to prostate functions. In this study, human nonmalignant prostate epithelial RWPE-1 cells were cocultured with testosterone (TE) -exposed prostate stromal fibroblasts WPMY-1 cells (TE-WPMY-1). The survival rate, epithelial-mesenchymal transition (EMT) and collagen deposition of RWPE-1 were observed. The expression profiles of circRNAs, lncRNAs and mRNAs in WPMY-1-derived exosome-like vesicles (WPMY-1-exo) were explored by high-throughput RNA sequencing. Firstly, both TE-WPMY-1 and TE-WPMY-1-exo significantly promoted RWPE-1 cells proliferation. Secondly, 41 circRNAs, 132 lncRNAs and 1057 mRNAs were differentially expressed (DE) between TE-WPMY-1-exo and the control. Functional enrichment analyses, co-expression analyses and quantitative real-time PCR verification showed that the DE RNAs played important roles in cell proliferation, structure, phenotype and fibrosis. Lastly, blocking WPMY-1-exo biogenesis/release by GW4869 can attenuate TE-WPMY-1-stimulated RWPE-1 cells EMT and collagen deposition. Taken together, our results indicated that WPMY-1-exo modulated the phenotypes changes and collagen deposition of prostate epithelial cells. It provided a novel basis for understanding the underlying mechanisms of RWPE-1 cells EMT and fibrosis induced by WPMY-1 in BPH.
… progress from a normal to a malignant, invasive phenotype. We have … normal epithelium to PIN, and then to invasive carcinoma. The non-tumorigenic human prostatic epithelial RWPE-1 …
BACKGROUND: Cell-matrix interactions via integrin receptors are critical for acinar morphogenesis. The non-tumorigenic, human prostate epithelial cell line RWPE-1 was used in a three-dimensional (3D) cell culture model to identify the matrix protein and its integrin receptor required for acinar morphogenesis. METHODS: 3D cultures, immunostaining, confocal microscopy, and Western blot analysis were used to examine acinar formation on matrix proteins and to determine integrin receptor expression. RESULTS: RWPE-1 cells differentiate into acini of polarized cells with a distinct lumen in 3D Matrigel culture. In contrast, the malignant WPE1-NB26 prostate epithelial cells form solid cell masses. In 3D gels of laminin-1, type IV collagen, or fibronectin, RWPE-1 cells form acini only in laminin-1. Anti-laminin-1 antibody reduces acinar formation in a dose-dependent manner. Polarized RWPE-1 cells showed basal expression of alpha6 and beta1 integrin subunits. Blocking antibodies to alpha6 or beta1 reduced acinar formation to 9 and 6 percent of control, respectively. The beta1 integrin colocalized with focal adhesion kinase (FAK). Inhibition of extracellular signal-regulated kinase kinase activity significantly reduced acinar formation to 38 percent of control, suggesting that beta1 integrin-mediated signal transduction may be regulated through a FAK pathway. CONCLUSIONS: While basal expression of alpha6beta1 integrin in RWPE-1 cells correlates with their ability to polarize and form acini, a decrease or loss of alpha6, and diffused beta1 expression in WPE1-NB26 cells correlates with loss of acinar-forming ability. Results show that laminin-1 and a functional alpha6beta1 integrin receptor are required for acinar morphogenesis. This novel 3D cell culture model is useful for elucidating regulation of acinar morphogenesis and its loss during prostate carcinogenesis.
Abstract Background Estrogen is involved in the pathophysiological process of benign prostatic hyperplasia (BPH), in which epithelial-mesenchymal transition (EMT) plays an important role. Upregulation of aquaporin (AQP) 5, which is directly activated by estrogen, has been reported to promote EMT in multiple cells. This study aimed to examine the effects of AQP5 on estrogen-induced EMT in the prostate. Methods Normal prostate (NP) tissue samples without any histopathological changes and BPH tissue samples with pathologically confirmed hyperplasia were obtained. An EMT cell model was subsequently established by adding estradiol (E2) to RWPE-1 cells, after which AQP5 knockdown was performed. Tissue morphological and immunohistochemical features were examined using hematoxylin-eosin and immunohistochemical staining. Western blot analysis was performed to determine the expression of AQPs, estrogen receptors, and EMT-related proteins. Cell proliferation was assessed and supernatants were collected for enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay to determine transforming growth factor-β1 (TGF-β1) concentrations. Immunofluorescence staining was performed to assess protein expressions in RWPE-1 cells. Results BPH tissues exhibited greater EMT (TGF-β1: 1.362 ± 0.196 vs. 0.107 ± 0.067, P = 0.003; vimentin: 1.581 ± 0.508 vs. 0.221 ± 0.047, P < 0.001; E-cadherin: 0.197 ± 0.188 vs. 1.344 ± 0.088, P < 0.001), higher AQP5 (1.268 ± 0.136 vs. 0.227 ± 0.055, P < 0.001) and estrogen receptor (ER) α (1.250 ± 0.117 vs. 0.329 ± 0.134, P < 0.001) expression but lower ERβ (0.271 ± 0.184 vs. 1.564 ± 0.130, P < 0.001) expression than NP tissues. E2-stimulated cells had higher AQP5 expression (1.298 ± 0.058 vs. 1.085 ± 0.104, P = 0.049), increased cell proliferation (1.510 ± 0.089 vs.1.000 ± 0.038, P < 0.001), and EMT (TGF-β1 concentration: 0.352 ± 0.021 ng/mL vs. 0.125 ± 0.014 ng/mL, P < 0.001; vimentin: 1.641 ± 0.120 vs. 0.188 ± 0.020, P = 0.002; E-cadherin: 0.075 ± 0.030 vs. 0.843 ± 0.046, P < 0.001) than controls. E2-stimulated cells with AQP5 knockdown exhibited decreased EMT (TGF-β1 concentration: 0.223 ± 0.041 ng/mL vs. 0.352 ± 0.021 ng/mL, P = 0.016; vimentin: 0.675 ± 0.056 vs. 1.641 ± 0.120, P = 0.001; E-cadherin: 0.159 ± 0.037 vs. 0.075 ± 0.030, P = 0.040) than E2-stimulated cells with non-related small interfering RNA (siRNA). Conclusion Our findings suggest that estrogen induces BPH possibly by promoting AQP5 expression. Hence, AQP5 might be a novel target for modulating EMT in prostate epithelial cells.
Prostate cancer is one of the diseases worldwide that causes cancer‐related deaths in men and is the second most common cancer affecting thousands of men each year in the United States behind only lung cancer. Artesunate (ART) is part of the artemisinin drugs for the treatment of malaria. Paclitaxel (PTX) is an anticancer agent that belongs to the Taxane class and is used for the treatment of metastatic hormone‐refractory prostate cancer.
Among the well-established alterations contributing to prostate cancer (PCa) pathogenesis, epigenetics is an important player in its development and aggressive disease state. Moreover, since no curative therapies are available for advanced stage disease, there is an urgent need for novel therapeutic strategies targeting this subset of patients. Thus, we aimed to evaluate the combined antineoplastic effects of DNA methylation inhibitor hydralazine and histone deacetylase inhibitors panobinostat and valproic acid in several prostate cell lines. The effect of these drugs was assessed in four PCa (LNCaP, 22Rv1, DU145 and PC-3) cell lines, as well as in non-malignant epithelial (RWPE-1) and stromal (WPMY-1) cell lines, using several assays to evaluate cell viability, apoptosis, proliferation, DNA damage and clonogenic potential. We found that exposure to each epidrug separately reduced viability of all PCa cells in a dose-dependent manner and that combined treatments led to synergic growth inhibitory effects, impacting also on colony formation, invasion, apoptotic and proliferation rates. Interestingly, antitumoral effects of combined treatment were particularly expressive in DU145 cells. We concluded that hydralazine and panobinostat attenuate malignant properties of PCa cells, constituting a potential therapeutic tool to counteract PCa progression.
… , we established LNCaP/TR-D3 cells, LNCaP cell sublines … of human prostate acinar formation using RWPE-1 cells. … LNCaP, DU145 and PC-3 cells were grown in RPMI 1640 …
… RWPE-1 cells derived from normal prostatic tissues, and prostate cancer cells derived from metastasis in bone (PC-3), brain (DU145), lymph node (LNCaP… work on the biological roles of …
Nanomechanical properties of living cells, as measured with atomic force microscopy (AFM), are increasingly recognized as criteria that differentiate normal and pathologically altered cells. Locally measured cell elastic properties, described by the parameter known as Young's modulus, are currently proposed as a new diagnostic parameter that can be used at the early stage of cancer detection. In this study, local mechanical properties of normal human prostate (RWPE-1) cells and a range of malignant (22Rv1) and metastatic prostate cells (LNCaP, Du145 and PC3) were investigated. It was found that non-malignant prostate cells are stiffer than cancer cells while the metastatic cells are much softer than malignant cells from the primary tumor site. Next, the biochemical properties of the cells were measured using confocal Raman (RS) and Fourier-transform infrared (FT-IR) spectroscopies to reveal these cells' biochemical composition as malignant transformation proceeds. Nanomechanical and biochemical profiles of five different prostate cell lines were subsequently analyzed using partial least squares regression (PLSR) in order to identify which spectral features of the RS and FT-IR spectra correlate with the cell's elastic properties. The PLSR-based model could predict Young's modulus values based on both RS and FT-IR spectral information. These outcomes show not only that AFM, RS and FT-IR techniques can be used for discrimination between normal and cancer cells, but also that a linear correlation between mechanical response and biomolecular composition of the cells that undergo malignant transformation can be found. This knowledge broadens our understanding of how prostate cancer cells evolve thorough the multistep process of tumor pathogenesis.
Could the kinetin riboside be used to inhibit human prostate cell epithelial–mesenchymal transition?
The epithelial–mesenchymal transition (EMT) is a molecular process connected to higher expression of vimentin and increased activity of transcription factors (Snail, Twist) which restrains E-cadherin. EMT has been linked to prostate cancer metastatic potential, therapy resistance, and poor outcomes. Kinetin riboside (9-(b-dribofuranosyl)-6-furfurylaminopurine, KR) is a naturally occurring cytokinin, which induces apoptosis and shows strong antiproliferative activity against various human cancer cell lines. To establish the effect of KR on human prostate cell lines, expression of, e.g. AR, E-, N-cadherins, Vimentin, Snail, Twist, and MMPs, was analysed at mRNA and protein levels using Western Blot and RT-PCR and/or RQ-PCR techniques. KR inhibited the growth of human prostate cancer cells, but also, to a small extent, of normal cells. This effect depended on the type of the cells and their androgen sensitivity. KR also decreased the level of p-Akt, which takes part in androgen signalling modulation. The antiapoptotic Bcl-2 protein was down-regulated in cancer cell lines, while that of Bax is up-regulated upon KR exposure. KR contributed to re-expression of the E-cadherin as well as to significant changes in cell migration. Taken together, our results indicate for the first time that KR can be proposed as a factor for signalling pathways regulation that participates in the inhibition of development of aggressive forms of prostate cancer, and may alter the approach to therapeutic interventions. We propose KR as a potent inhibitor of EMT in human prostate cells.
… and LNCaP human prostate cancer cell lines and RWPE-1 … cells, respectively, was selected for further molecularbiology … In this study, PC-3 cells were the least sensitive to the effects …
A possible role of the PDZ domain-containing protein 2 (PDZD2) in prostate tumorigenesis has been suggested. Besides, PDZD2 is posttranslationally cleaved by a caspase-dependent mechanism to form a secreted PDZ domain-containing protein 2 (sPDZD2) with unknown functions in humans. In this study, we demonstrate the endogenous expression of PDZD2 and secretion of sPDZD2 in cancerous DU145, PC-3, 22Rv1, LNCaP, and immortalized RWPE-1 prostate epithelial cells. Inhibition of endogenous sPDZD2 production and secretion by DU145, PC-3, 22Rv1, and RWPE-1 cells via the caspase-3 inhibitor Z-DEVD-FMK resulted in increased cell proliferation, which was abrogated by treatment with exogenous recombinant sPDZD2. Whereas sPDZD2-induced antiproliferation in DU145, PC-3, and 22Rv1 cells, it induced apoptosis in LNCaP cells. The data suggest that endogenous sPDZD2, produced by caspase-3-mediated cleavage from PDZD2, may function as a novel autocrine growth suppressor for human prostate cancer cells. The antiproliferative effect of sPDZD2 was apparently mediated through slowing the entry of DU145, PC-3, and 22Rv1 cells into the S phase of the cell cycle. In DU145 cells, this can be attributed to stimulated p53 and p21(CIP1/WAF1) expression by sPDZD2. On the other hand, the apoptotic effect of sPDZD2 on LNCaP cells was apparently mediated via p53-independent Bad stimulation. Together our results indicate the presence of p53-dependent and p53-independent PDZD2/sPDZD2 autocrine growth suppressive signaling pathways in human prostate cancer cells and suggest a novel therapeutic approach of harnessing the latent tumor-suppressive potential of an endogenous autocrine signaling protein like sPDZD2 to inhibit prostate cancer growth.
A high adherence to a Mediterranean diet has been related to numerous beneficial effects in human health, including a lower incidence and mortality of prostate cancer (PCa). Olive oil is an important source of phenolic bioactive compounds, mainly hydroxytyrosol (HT), of this diet. Because of the growing interest of this compound and its derivatives as a cancer chemopreventive agent, we aimed to compare the in vitro effect of HT isolated from olive mill wastewaters and five semisynthetic alkyl ether, ester, and nitro-derivatives against prostate cancer (PCa) cell lines. The effect in cell proliferation was determined in RWPE-1, LNCaP, 22Rv1, and PC-3 cells by resazurin assay, the effect in cell migration by wound healing assay, and tumorsphere and colony formation were evaluated. The changes in key signaling pathways involved in carcinogenesis were assessed by using a phosphorylation pathway profiling array and by Western blotting. Antiproliferative effects of HT and two lipophilic derivatives [hydroxytyrosyl acetate (HT-Ac)/ethyl hydroxytyrosyl ether (HT-Et)] were significantly higher in cancerous PC-3 and 22Rv1 cells than in non-malignant RWPE-1 cells. HT/HT-Ac/HT-Et significantly reduced migration capacity in RWPE-1 and PC-3 and prostatosphere size and colony formation in 22Rv1, whereas only HT-Ac and HT-Et reduced these functional parameters in PC-3. The cytotoxic effect in 22Rv1 cells was correlated with modifications in the phosphorylation pattern of key proteins, including ERK1/2 and AKT. Consistently, HT-Ac and HT-Et decreased p-AKT levels in PC-3. In sum, our results suggest that HT and its lipophilic derivatives could be considered as potential therapeutic tools in PCa.
Introduction The use of the 5-alpha reductase inhibitors (5-ARIs) finasteride and dutasteride for prostate cancer prevention is still under debate. The FDA recently concluded that the increased prevalence of high-grade tumors among 5-ARI-treated patients must not be neglected, and they decided to disallow the use of 5-ARIs for prostate cancer prevention. This study was conducted to verify the effects of finasteride on prostate cell migration and invasion and the related enzymes/proteins in normal human and tumoral prostatic cell lines. Materials and Methods RWPE-1, LNCaP, PC3 and DU145 cells were cultivated to 60% confluence and exposed for different periods to either 10 µM or 50 µM finasteride that was diluted in culture medium. The conditioned media were collected and concentrated, and MMP2 and MMP9 activities and TIMP-1 and TIMP-2 protein expression were determined. Cell viability, migration and invasion were analyzed, and the remaining cell extracts were submitted to androgen receptor (AR) detection by western blotting techniques. Experiments were carried out in triplicate. Results Cell viability was not significantly affected by finasteride exposure. Finasteride significantly downregulated MMP2 and MMP9 activities in RWPE-1 and PC3 cells and MMP2 in DU145 cells. TIMP-2 expression in RWPE-1 cells was upregulated after exposure. The cell invasion of all four tested cell lines was inhibited by exposure to 50 µM of finasteride, and migration inhibition only occurred for RWPE-1 and LNCaP cells. AR was expressed by LNCaP, RWPE-1 and PC3 cells. Conclusions Although the debate on the higher incidence of high-grade prostate cancer among 5-ARI-treated patients remains, our findings indicate that finasteride may attenuate tumor aggressiveness and invasion, which could vary depending on the androgen responsiveness of a patient’s prostate cells.
This is Part 2 of a three-part review and deals with tumorigenic cell lines. Several immortalized and malignant adult human prostatic epithelial cell lines have been recently developed. The three most widely used carcinoma cell lines-DU-145, PC-3, and LNCaP-developed between 1977 and 1980, have greatly contributed to our current understanding of prostate cancer. Before a cell line can be accepted as having prostatic epithelial origin, some basic characteristics must be established. Expression of specific cytokeratins but absence of desmin and factor VIII should be first determined to establish epithelial origin. Responsiveness to androgens and expression of androgen receptor and prostate-specific antigen should be examined under stringent culture conditions to establish prostatic epithelial origin. Response to growth factors and expression of their receptors facilitates further characterization of cell behavior. Cell lines immortalized by human papillomaviruses (HPVs) are of special interest because HPVs are involved in a variety of anogenital cancers and may also play a role in prostate carcinogenesis. Malignant transformation of HPV-18 immortalized cells with the ras oncogene provides cell systems for investigating the multistep process of carcinogenesis. Each cell line has some unique characteristics, whether it arose directly from a carcinoma or resulted from immortalization with Simian virus 40 (SV40) or HPV, or was transformed in vitro by oncogenes. Comparisons of these characteristics should facilitate elucidation of the mechanisms involved in the initiation, promotion, and progression of prostate cancer. These cell lines will further serve as useful models for investigating tumor progression, invasion, metastasis, new therapeutic strategies, drug resistance, and its reversal and chemoprevention. The nontumorigenic cell lines were discussed in Part 1 [1]. This review summarizes the characteristics of several currently available tumorigenic, adult human prostatic epithelial cell lines.
Here we report that Prostate Cancer (PCa) cell-lines DU145, PC3, LNCaP and RWPE-1 grown in 3D matrices in contrast to conventional 2D monolayers, display distinct differences in …
… related to the regulation of PSA, androgen receptor (AR) and cell … and PSA protein expression. As shown in Figure 1, both AR and … (RWPE-1) and positive (LNCaP and 22Rv1) cell lines. …
TSPYL5, a putative tumor suppressor gene, belongs to the nucleosome assembly protein family. The chromosomal location of the TSPYL5 gene is 8Q22.1, and its exact role in prostate cancer etiology remains unclear. Further TSPYL5 gene and protein expression in prostate carcinoma cells and diseased tissues including its susceptibility for epigenetic silencing is unknown. Also, not known is the variation in TSPYL5 protein expression with regards to progression of prostatic carcinoma and its possible role in drug sensitivity. TSPYL5, DNMT-1 and DNMT-B gene expression in DU145, LNCaP and RWPE-1 cells and prostate tumor tissues was analyzed by qRT-PCR and RT-PCR. Demethylation experiments were done by treating DU145 and LNCaP cells with 5-aza-2′-deoxycytidine in vitro. Methylation analysis of TSPYL5 gene was performed by methylation specific PCR and pyrosequencing. TSPYL5 protein expression in benign and diseased prostate tumor tissues was performed by immunohistochemistry and in the cells by Western blotting. TSPYL5 was differentially expressed in non-tumorigenic prostate epithelial cells (RWPE-1), androgen independent (DU145), dependent (LNCaP) prostate carcinoma cells and tissues. Methylation-specific PCR and pyrosequencing analysis identified an inverse relationship between DNA methylation and expression leading to the silencing of TSPYL5 gene. Treatment of prostate carcinoma cells in which TSPYL5 was absent or low (DU145 and LNCaP) with the demethylating agent 5-aza-2′-deoxycytidine upregulated its expression in these cells. Immunohistochemical studies clearly identified TSPYL5 protein in benign tissue and in tumors with Gleason score (GS) of 6 and 7. TSPYL5 protein levels were very low in tumors of GS ≥ 8. TSPYL5 overexpression in LNCaP cells increased the cell sensitivity to chemotherapy drugs such as docetaxel and paclitaxel, as measured by the cellular viability. Furthermore, the cells also exhibited reduced CDKN1A expression with only marginal reduction in pAKT. Decrease in TSPYL5 protein in advanced tumors might possibly function as an indicator of prostate tumor progression. Its absence due to methylation-induced silencing can lead to reduced drug sensitivity in prostate carcinoma.
… WPMY-1 and the epithelial cell line RWPE-1 in a dose- and time-… the expression of ERα and AR in the WPMY-1 and RWPE-1 … arrest and the downregulation of ERα and AR expression. …
Background/Aims: Raf kinase inhibitory protein (RKIP) is a scaffolding molecule in the PEBP family that sequesters certain signaling molecules away from their pathways, thereby abrogating intracellular growth signals. RKIP has been assigned multiple functions and is associated with an increasing number of diseases through its involvement with signal transduction pathways. We previously demonstrated that RKIP is highly expressed in human normal prostate epithelial cells and plays a pivotal role during prostate cancer (PCa) progression. Whether RKIP is subject to endocrine regulation has not been reported. Methods: The effect of dihydrotestosterone (DHT) on RKIP expression in normal prostate epithelial cells was determined by real-time RT-PCR and Western blot. Report assay was performed to determine whether the regulation of RKIP by androgens is at the transcriptional level. The binding of androgen receptor (AR) to the RKIP promoter was determined by EMSA and Chromatin Immunoprecipitation (ChIP) assays. To determine whether RKIP was regulated by androgen in vivo, we examined RKIP expression level in response to castration in 6-8 week old C57BL/6 male mice. Results: Here we report that DHT positively regulates the transcription of RKIP in the normal prostate epithelial cells. The anti-androgen bicalutamide blocked androgen-mediated regulation of RKIP, which indicates that this regulation is mediated through AR. Transfection of the cells with a RKIP promoter-driven luciferase reporter vector showed that DHT increased RKIP promoter activity in parallel with changes in expression. EMSA demonstrates that AR binds to a putative ARE in the RKIP promoter, which was further validated by ChIP assay. Importantly, these data are further supported by our in vivo experiment where castrated mice had less RKIP expression in their prostate glands than sham-operated mice. Conclusions: Collectively, the results establish RKIP as a novel androgen target gene. Androgens induce RKIP expression through AR-mediated transcriptional modulation of the RKIP promoter in the prostate. This is the first demonstration of endocrine regulation of the metastasis suppressor gene RKIP.
… in PSA secretion by comparing iPLA2 activity and expression in normal prostate epithelial RWPE-1 … these cells, whereas RWPE-1 cells required extensive androgen priming to initiate …
The biological role of steroid 5α-reductase isozymes (encoded by the SRD5A1 and SRD5A2 genes) and angiogenic factors that play important roles in the pathogenesis and vascularization of prostate cancer (PC) is poorly understood. The sub-cellular expression of these isozymes and vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) in PC tissue microarrays (n=62) was examined using immunohistochemistry. The effect of SRD5A inhibition on the angiogenesis pathway genes in PC was also examined in prostate cell lines, LNCaP, PC3, and RWPE-1, by treating them with the SRD5A inhibitors finasteride and dutasteride, followed by western blot, quantitative PCR, and ELISA chip array techniques. In PC tissues, nuclear SRD5A1 expression was strongly associated with higher cancer Gleason scores (P=0.02), higher cancer stage (P=0.01), and higher serum prostate specific antigen (PSA) levels (P=0.01), whereas nuclear SRD5A2 expression was correlated with VEGF expression (P=0.01). Prostate tumor cell viability was significantly reduced in dutasteride-treated PC3 and RWPE-1 cells compared with finasteride-treated groups. Expression of the angiogenesis pathway genes transforming growth factor β 1 (TGFB1), endothelin (EDN1), TGFα (TGFA), and VEGFR1 was upregulated in LNCaP cells, and at least 7 out of 21 genes were upregulated in PC3 cells treated with finasteride (25 μM). Our findings suggest that SRD5A1 expression predominates in advanced PC, and that inhibition of SRD5A1 and SRD5A2 together was more effective in reducing cell numbers than inhibition of SRD5A2 alone. However, these inhibitors did not show any significant difference in prostate cell angiogenic response. Interestingly, some angiogenic genes remained activated after treatment, possibly due to the duration of treatment and tumor resistance to inhibitors.
Background Several data favor androgen receptor implication in prostate cancer initiation through the induction of several gene activation programs. The aim of the study is to identify potential biomarkers for early diagnosis of prostate cancer (PCa) among androgen-regulated genes (ARG) and to evaluate comparative expression of these genes in normal prostate and normal prostate-related androgen-sensitive tissues that do not (or rarely) give rise to cancer. Methods ARG were selected in non-neoplastic adult human prostatic epithelial RWPE-1 cells stably expressing an exogenous human androgen receptor, using RNA-microarrays and validation by qRT-PCR. Expression of 48 preselected genes was quantified in tissue samples (seminal vesicles, prostate transitional zones and prostate cancers, benign prostatic hypertrophy obtained from surgical specimens) using TaqMan® low-density arrays. The diagnostic performances of these potential biomarkers were compared to that of genes known to be associated with PCa (i.e. PCA3 and DLX1). Results and Discussion By crossing expression studies in 26 matched PCa and normal prostate transitional zone samples, and 35 matched seminal vesicle and PCa samples, 14 genes were identified. Similarly, 9 genes were overexpressed in 15 benign prostatic hypertrophy samples, as compared to PCa samples. Overall, we selected 8 genes of interest to evaluate their diagnostic performances in comparison with that of PCA3 and DLX1. Among them, 3 genes: CRYAB, KCNMA1 and SDPR, were overexpressed in all 3 reference non-cancerous tissues. The areas under ROC curves of these genes reached those of PCA3 (0.91) and DLX1 (0.94). Conclusions We identified ARG with reduced expression in PCa and with significant diagnostic values for discriminating between cancerous and non-cancerous prostatic tissues, similar that of PCA3. Given their expression pattern, they could be considered as potentially protective against prostate cancer. Moreover, they could be complementary to known genes overexpressed in PCa and included along with them in multiplex diagnostic tools.
BPH is a disease prevalent among elderly men that is characterized by abnormal proliferation of prostatic epithelial and stromal tissues. No effective treatment exists for BPH owing to lack of a clear understanding of its molecular etiology. Although several studies have reported therapeutic effects of baicalin against numerous diseases, including prostate cancer, its beneficial effects on BPH have not yet been explored. The present study investigated the therapeutic effects of baicalin on the development of BPH and its mechanism of action. We established a testosterone-treated BPH animal model and DHT-stimulated prostate cell lines, including RWPE-1 and WPMY-1. Administration of baicalin ameliorated the pathological prostate enlargement, suppressed the production of DHT, and inhibited the activity of 5α- reductase Type II in the animal model. BC exerted these effects via its anti-proliferative effects by restoring the Bax/Bcl-2 ratio, activating caspase-3 and caspase-8, and inducing the phosphorylation of AMPK. In vitro studies using DHT-stimulated prostate cells demonstrated an up-regulation of BPH-related and proliferation markers, whereas baicalin clearly reduced the overexpression of AR, PSA, PCNA, and Bcl-2. These results suggested that baicalin could suppress androgen-dependent development of BPH both in vivo and in vitro by inducing apoptosis.
Lethal phenotypes of human prostate cancer are characterized by progression to androgen independence, although the mechanisms behind this progression remain unclear. Arsenic is a potential human prostate carcinogen that may affect tumor progression. In this study, we used a prostate cancer cell model in which an immortalized, nontumorigenic human prostate epithelial cell line (RWPE-1) had been malignantly transformed by chronic low-level arsenic to help determine whether arsenic affects prostate tumor progression. Control and CAsE-PE (chronic-arsenic–exposed human prostate epithelial) cells were continuously maintained in a complete medium [keratinocyte serum-free medium (K-SFM) with bovine pituitary extract and epidermal growth factor] or in a steroid-depleted medium (K-SFM alone). The arsenic-transformed cells showed a more rapid proliferation rate in complete medium than did control cells and also showed sustained proliferation in steroid-reduced medium. Although both control and CAsE-PE cells showed similar levels of androgen receptor (AR), androgens were less effective in stimulating cell proliferation and AR-related gene expression in CAsE-PE cells. For instance, dihydrotestosterone caused a 4.5-fold increase in prostate-specific antigen transcript in control cells but only a 1.5-fold increase in CAsE-PE cells. CAsE-PE cells also showed relatively low levels of growth stimulation by nonandrogen steroids, such as estradiol. Thus, arsenic-induced malignant transformation is associated with acquired androgen independence in human prostate cells. This acquired androgen independence was apparently not due to AR up-regulation, increased activity, or altered ligand specificity. The precise manner in which arsenic altered CAsE-PE growth and progression is undefined but may involve a bypass of AR involving direct stimulation of downstream signaling pathways.
Prostate cell proliferation, driven by testosterone, is a major characteristic of benign prostatic hyperplasia (BPH). GV1001, a human telomerase reverse transcriptase catalytic subunit, is an injectable formulation used as a cancer vaccine. It functions as a cell penetrating peptide to regulate cell proliferation. Here, we found that GV1001 effectively suppressed proliferation of prostatic stromal myofibroblasts (WPMY-1) and prostatic epithelial cells (RWPE-1 and WPE-NA22) treated with dihydrotestosterone. Also, GV1001 bound to androgen receptors (ARs) in the cytosol of stromal and epithelial cells. In an experimental animal model implanted with an infusion pump for spontaneous and continuous release of testosterone, revealed that GV1001 reduced prostatic hypertrophy and inhibited the cell proliferation and the expression of Ki67, proliferating cell nuclear antigen, and prostate specific antigen. In addition, GV1001 prevented fibrosis of the prostate by downregulating expression of prostatic epithelial-mesenchymal transition (EMT)-related proteins such as transforming growth factor (TGF)-β, Snail, Slug, N-cadherin, and Vimentin, and by up-regulating E-cadherin. Taken together, these results suggest that GV1001, which suppresses TGF-β-mediated EMT by outcompeting testosterone for binding to AR, is a potential therapeutic drug for BPH accompanied by prostatic fibrosis.
Cigarettes consumption is continued to be popular. We found that cigarette smoke (CS) exposure promoted prostatic fibrosis. In this study, human prostate epithelial RWPE-1 cells were co-cultured with exosomes derived from CS exposed-WPMY-1 cells (CS-WPMY-1-exo). The collagen deposition, primary ciliogenesis, epithelial-mesenchymal transition (EMT) and transforming growth factor (TGF)-β1 level of RWPE-1 were evaluated. The circRNAs profiles of WPMY-1-exo were explored by high-throughput RNA sequencing. It was found that CS-WPMY-1-exo significantly promoted RWPE-1 collagen deposition, EMT and primary ciliogenesis. There were 17 differentially expressed (DE) circRNAs (including circ_0001359) between CS-WPMY-1-exo and the negative control. Functional enrichment analyses showed that the DE circRNAs played important roles in ciliary basal body, spindle microtubule and TGF-β signaling pathway. Circ_0001359 siRNA attenuated CS-WPMY-1 induced RWPE-1 cells collagen deposition, EMT and primary ciliogenesis, as well as inhibited the level of TGF-β1. The whole results showed that circ_0001359 derived from CS-WPMY-1-exo contributed to prostatic fibrosis via stimulating epithelial cells phenotypes changes and collagen deposition.
Cyclic pentapeptide compounds have garnered much attention as a drug discovery resource. This study focused on the characterization and anti-benign prostatic hyperplasia (BPH) properties of avellanin A from Aspergillus fumigatus fungus in marine sediment samples collected in the Beibu Gulf of Guangxi Province in China. The antiproliferative effect and molecular mechanism of avellanin A were explored in testosterone propionate (TP)-induced RWPE-1 cells. The transcriptome results showed that avellanin A significantly blocked the ECM–receptor interaction and suppressed the downstream PI3K-Akt signalling pathway. Molecular docking revealed that avellanin A has a good affinity for the cathepsin L protein, which is involved in the terminal degradation of extracellular matrix components. Subsequently, qRT-PCR analysis revealed that the expression of the genes COL1A1, COL1A2, COL5A2, COL6A3, MMP2, MMP9, ITGA2, and ITGB3 was significantly downregulated after avellanin A intervention. The Western blot results also confirmed that it not only reduced ITGB3 and FAK/p-FAK protein expression but also inhibited PI3K/p-PI3K and Akt/p-Akt protein expression in the PI3K-Akt signalling pathway. Furthermore, avellanin A downregulated Cyclin D1 protein expression and upregulated Bax, p21WAF1/Cip1, and p53 proapoptotic protein expression in TP-induced RWPE-1 cells, leading to cell cycle arrest and inhibition of cell proliferation. The results of this study support the use of avellanin A as a potential new drug for the treatment of BPH.
… cells was then transferred to normal prostate epithelial (RWPE-1) cells, to see if it induces aberrant proliferation. Further, catechins (EGCG and EGC), that have been reported to show …
The interplay between stromal and epithelial interactions is pivotal in the development and maintenance of various organs, including the prostate, an essential accessory gland in the male reproductive system. The prostate gland's development and physiology are intricately tied to the localized concentrations of sex steroids, specifically androgens and estrogens. Perturbations in this hormonal balance, often associated with aging, have been implicated in prostatic diseases such as hyperplasia and cancer. In this study, we investigated the influence of estradiol (E2) and dihydrotestosterone (DHT) on prostate cells’ interactions and acinar morphogenesis. Increasing E2:DHT ratios were found to enhance stromal proliferation without a concurrent increase in epithelial cell population. Stromal conditioned medium (CM) promoted aberrant epithelial growth via elevated mitogenic factors, ERα/AR expression, and BAX downregulation. Notable expression of CK05 marker suggests basal cell involvement. Additionally, CM stimulated acinar branching and expansion in prostatospheres, mimicking early cancerous acinar changes. These findings illuminate the complex interplay between hormonal ratios and stromal-epithelial crosstalk, offering valuable insights into potential mechanisms underlying age-related prostate pathologies.
… RWPE-1 cells were further examined for the effects of calcium … Optimized medium composition allows nearly all seeded RWPE-1 … The interaction between the epithelial cells and stromal …
BackgroundThe prostate gland represents a multifaceted system in which prostate epithelia and stroma have distinct physiological roles. To understand the interaction between stroma and glandular epithelia, it is essential to delineate the gene expression profiles of these two tissue types in prostate cancer. Most studies have compared tumor and normal samples by performing global expression analysis using a mixture of cell populations. This report presents the first study of prostate tumor tissue that examines patterns of differential expression between specific cell types using laser capture microdissection (LCM).MethodsLCM was used to isolate distinct cell-type populations and identify their gene expression differences using oligonucleotide microarrays. Ten differentially expressed genes were then analyzed in paired tumor and non-neoplastic prostate tissues by quantitative real-time PCR. Expression patterns of the transcription factors, WT1 and EGR1, were further compared in established prostate cell lines. WT1 protein expression was also examined in prostate tissue microarrays using immunohistochemistry.ResultsThe two-step method of laser capture and microarray analysis identified nearly 500 genes whose expression levels were significantly different in prostate epithelial versus stromal tissues. Several genes expressed in epithelial cells (WT1, GATA2, and FGFR-3) were more highly expressed in neoplastic than in non-neoplastic tissues; conversely several genes expressed in stromal cells (CCL5, CXCL13, IGF-1, FGF-2, and IGFBP3) were more highly expressed in non-neoplastic than in neoplastic tissues. Notably, EGR1 was also differentially expressed between epithelial and stromal tissues. Expression of WT1 and EGR1 in cell lines was consistent with these patterns of differential expression. Importantly, WT1 protein expression was demonstrated in tumor tissues and was absent in normal and benign tissues.ConclusionsThe prostate represents a complex mix of cell types and there is a need to analyze distinct cell populations to better understand their potential interactions. In the present study, LCM and microarray analysis were used to identify novel gene expression patterns in prostate cell populations, including identification of WT1 expression in epithelial cells. The relevance of WT1 expression in prostate cancer was confirmed by analysis of tumor tissue and cell lines, suggesting a potential role for WT1 in prostate tumorigenesis.
Chronic prostatitis (CP) is a common and serious disorder characterized by unknown pathogenic mechanisms and recurrent symptoms. Exosomes isolated from prostate stromal cells can also be used to treat chronic inflammation. This study aimed to elucidate the mechanism of action of Calycosin (CA) during CP therapy.
… When we used ECIS to assess the cell behaviour of RWPE-1 cells, HGF caused a concentration-dependent increase in cell attachment (control vs. HGF 100 ng/ml, P<0.005) (Fig. 7C). …
… a nontumorigenic human prostate epithelial cell line (RWPE-1). Low concentrations of genistein (0–12.5 μmol/L) significantly increased cell proliferation and ERK1/2 activity (P<.01) in …
… epithelial cells. In order to examine the complex normal interactions between epithelial and stromal … human prostate epithelial cell line RWPE-1, which mimics normal epithelium in its …
Several immortalized and malignant adult human prostatic epithelial cell lines have recently been developed. The three most widely used carcinoma cell lines, DU-145, PC-3, and LNCaP, developed between 1977 and 1980, have greatly contributed to our present understanding of prostate cancer. Before a cell line can be accepted as having prostatic epithelial origin, some basic characteristics must be established. Expression of specific cytokeratins, but absence of desmin and factor VIII, should be first determined to establish epithelial origin. Responsiveness to androgens and expression of androgen receptor and prostate specific antigen should be examined under stringent culture conditions to establish prostatic epithelial origin. Response to growth factors and expression of their receptors facilitates further characterization of cell behavior. Cell lines immortalized by human papillomaviruses (HPVs) are of special interest because HPVs are involved in a variety of anogenital cancers and may also play a role in prostate carcinogenesis. Malignant transformation of HPV-18 immortalized cells with the ras oncogene provides cell systems for investigating the multistep process of carcinogenesis. Each cell line has some unique characteristics, whether it arose directly from a carcinoma or resulted from immortalization with simian virus 40 (SV40) or HPV or was transformed in vitro by oncogenes. Comparisons of these characteristics should facilitate elucidation of the mechanisms involved in initiation, promotion, and progression of prostate cancer. These cell lines will further serve as useful models for investigating tumor progression, invasion, metastasis, new therapeutic strategies, drug resistance, and its reversal and chemoprevention. This review will be published in three parts and will summarize cell markers necessary for characterization, as well as the characteristics and some applications of the immortalized as well as malignant adult human prostatic epithelial cell lines. Part 1 deals with cell markers and the immortalized, nontumorigenic cell lines.
… and characterization of an epithehal cell line (BPH-1) from human prostate tissue obtained by transurethral resection. Primary epithehal cell cultures were immortalized with SV40 large …
… Progress in prostate cancer research has been hindered by the … characterized, immortalized, human prostatic epithelial cell lines that express markers of normal prostatic epithelial cells …
BACKGROUND: Cell lines can provide powerful model systems for the study of human tumorigenesis. However, the human prostate cancer cell lines studied most intensively by investigators (PC3, DU145, and LNCaP) were established from metastatic lesions, and it is unlikely that they accurately recapitulate the genetic composition or biological behavior of primary prostate tumors. Cell lines more appropriate for the study of human prostate primary tumors would be those derived from spontaneously immortalized cells; unfortunately, explanted prostate cells survive only short-term in culture, and rarely immortalize spontaneously. Therefore, we examined whether cell lines developed through viral gene-mediated immortalization of human normal or primary tumor prostate epithelium express aspects of the normal or malignant phenotypes, and could serve as appropriate models for normal or transformed human prostatic epithelium. METHODS: To accomplish these goals, we assessed the phenotypic expression of cell cultures established through the immortalization of normal (1532N, 1535N, 1542N, and PrEC-T) or malignant (1532T, 1535T, and 1542T) human prostate epithelium with the E6 and E7 genes of HPV-16, or the large T antigen gene of SV40. RESULTS: Examination of these cell lines for their proliferative rates and their abilities to grow with or without serum or androgen stimulation, to form colonies in soft agar, or to form tumors in vivo, suggests that they may serve as valid, useful tools for the elucidation of prostate tumorigenesis. Moreover, the observation of structural alterations involving chromosome 8, including gain of 8q in 3 of the 4 cell lines expressing aspects of the malignant phenotype, implies that these cell lines accurately recapitulate the genetic composition of primary prostate tumors. CONCLUSIONS: Taken together, these data suggest that cell lines generated from immortalized normal or primary tumor epithelium may be useful for the elucidation of early transforming events in the prostate.
This is Part 3 of a three-part review. It deals with the possible role of oncogenes and suppressor genes in human prostate carcinoma as well applications of nontumorigenic and tumorigenic human prostate cell lines described in Parts 1 and 2 [1,2]. Several immortalized and malignant adult human prostatic epithelial cell lines have recently been developed. The three most widely used carcinoma cell lines, DU-145, PC-3, and LNCaP, developed between 1977 and 1980, have greatly contributed to our present understanding of prostate cancer. Before a cell line can be accepted as having prostatic epithelial origin, some basic characteristics must be established. Expression of specific cytokeratins but absence of desmin and factor VIII should be first determined to establish epithelial origin. Responsiveness to androgens and expression of androgen receptor and prostate-specific antigen should be examined under stringent culture conditions to establish prostatic epithelial origin. Response to growth factors and expression of their receptors facilitates further characterization of cell behavior. Cell lines immortalized by human papillomaviruses (HPVs) are of special interest because HPVs are involved in a variety of anogenital cancers and may also play a role in prostate carcinogenesis. Malignant transformation of HPV-18 immortalized cells with the ras oncogene provides cell systems for investigating the multistep process of carcinogenesis. Each cell line has some unique characteristics, whether it arose directly from a carcinoma or resulted from immortalization with simian virus 40 (SV40) or HPV, or was transformed in vitro by oncogenes. Comparisons of these characteristics should facilitate elucidation of the mechanisms involved in initiation, promotion and progression of prostate cancer. These cell lines will further serve as useful models for investigating tumor progression, invasion, metastasis, new therapeutic strategies, drug resistance and its reversal and chemoprevention. This review summarizes some applications of the currently available immortalized, non-tumorigenic as well as the tumorigenic adult human prostatic epithelial cell lines.
… a cell line with these characteristics that would be suitable for the study of the early stages of prostate epithelial cell … of conditionally immortalized prostate epithelial and stromal cell lines …
… feature of immortalized cells of prostatic origin, … characterization applied to a range of prostatic epithelial cell lines. Published in vitro research using commercially available prostatic cell …
… human prostate epithelial cell cultures derived from both the benign and malignant tissues of prostate cancer patients with telomerase, a gene that prevents cellular senescence. …
… In summary, PZ-HPV-7T cell, generated from an immortalized prostate epithelial cell line, represents a new model for the analysis of tumor initiation, EMT and cancer metastasis. While …
… Since both normal and neoplastic prostate cells usually have a limited … Cell lines generated in this study were characterized with … , and the expression of epithelial and prostate markers. …
… It has been reported that HPV-immortalized HPE cells are more likely to retain … characteristics of normal prostate epithelial cells as shown in HPV immortalized human epithelial cells (16,…
… cell cultures and provide an alternative to primary cell cultures as many of these immortalized cell lines retain the growth and differentiation characteristics of prostatic epithelial cells, …
A telomerase-immortalized primary human prostate cancer clonal cell line with neoplastic phenotypes.
Understanding of molecular genetic mechanisms underlying prostate carcinogenesis would be greatly advanced by in vitro models of prostate tumors representing primary tumors. We have successfully established a neoplastic immortalized human prostate epithelial (HPE) clonal culture derived from a primary tumor of a prostate cancer patient (RC-58T) with hTERT, the catalytic subunit of telomerase. The early passage RC-58T cells derived from a radical prostatectomy specimen of a 52-year-old white male patient was transduced through infection with a retrovirus vector expressing the hTERT for the establishment of the RC-58T/hTERT cell line. One clonal line, soft-agar derived from the RC-58T/hTERT cell line, was isolated and further characterized phenotypically and genetically. These clonal (RC-58T/hTERT SA#4) cells are currently growing well at passage 70 and exhibit transformed morphology. The RC-58T/hTERT SA#4 line expressed a high level of telomerase activity and showed anchorage-independent growth in soft agar. The clonal line like the untransduced RC-58T cells (passage 3) expressed prostate specific antigen (PSA), androgen receptor (AR), prostate stem cell antigen (PSCA), and an androgen-regulated prostate specific gene NKX3.1, P16, and cytokeratin (CK) 8. Growth is slightly stimulated by dihydrotestosterone (DHT), and lyates are immunoreactive with AR antibody by Western blot analysis. More importantly, this clonal line produced adenocarcinomas when transplanted into SCID mice. A number of chromosome alterations were observed including the loss of chromosome Y, 1q, 2p, 3p, 4q, 8p, 11p, 14p, 17p and 18q. Our results demonstrate that this primary tumor-derived HPE cell line retained its neoplastic phenotypes and its prostate specific markers and should allow elucidating molecular and genetic alterations involved in prostate cancer. This is the first documented case of an AR and PSA expressing telomerase established human prostate cancer cell line with neoplastic phenotypes from a primary tumor of a prostate cancer patient.
Prostate cancer development involves various mechanisms, which are poorly understood but pointing to epithelial mesenchymal transition (EMT) as the key mechanism in progression to metastatic disease. ABI1, a member of WAVE complex and actin cytoskeleton regulator and adaptor protein, acts as tumor suppressor in prostate cancer but the role of ABI1 in EMT is not clear. To investigate the molecular mechanism by which loss of ABI1 contributes to tumor progression, we disrupted the ABI1 gene in the benign prostate epithelial RWPE-1 cell line and determined its phenotype. Levels of ABI1 expression in prostate organoid tumor cell lines was evaluated by Western blotting and RNA sequencing. ABI1 expression and its association with prostate tumor grade was evaluated in a TMA cohort of 505 patients and metastatic cell lines. Low ABI1 expression is associated with biochemical recurrence, metastasis and death (p = 0.038). Moreover, ABI1 expression was significantly decreased in Gleason pattern 5 vs. pattern 4 (p = 0.0025) and 3 (p = 0.0012), indicating an association between low ABI1 expression and highly invasive prostate tumors. Disruption of ABI1 gene in RWPE-1 cell line resulted in gain of an invasive phenotype, which was characterized by a loss of cell-cell adhesion markers and increased migratory ability of RWPE-1 spheroids. Through RNA sequencing and protein expression analysis, we discovered that ABI1 loss leads to activation of non-canonical WNT signaling and EMT pathways, which are rescued by re-expression of ABI1. Furthermore, an increase in STAT3 phosphorylation upon ABI1 inactivation and the evidence of a high-affinity interaction between the FYN SH2 domain and ABI1 pY421 support a model in which ABI1 acts as a gatekeeper of non-canonical WNT-EMT pathway activation downstream of the FZD2 receptor. ABI1 controls prostate tumor progression and epithelial plasticity through regulation of EMT-WNT pathway. Here we discovered that ABI1 inhibits EMT through suppressing FYN-STAT3 activation downstream from non-canonical WNT signaling thus providing a novel mechanism of prostate tumor suppression.
Inorganic arsenic is an environmental human carcinogen of several organs including the urinary tract. RWPE-1 cells are immortalized, non-tumorigenic, human prostate epithelia that become malignantly transformed into the CAsE-PE line after continuous in vitro exposure to 5μM arsenite over a period of months. For insight into in vitro arsenite transformation, we performed RNA-seq for differential gene expression and targeted sequencing of KRAS. We report >7,000 differentially expressed transcripts in CAsE-PE cells compared to RWPE-1 cells at >2-fold change, q<0.05 by RNA-seq. Notably, KRAS expression was highly elevated in CAsE-PE cells, with pathway analysis supporting increased cell proliferation, cell motility, survival and cancer pathways. Targeted DNA sequencing of KRAS revealed a mutant specific allelic imbalance, ‘MASI’, frequently found in primary clinical tumors. We found high expression of a mutated KRAS transcript carrying oncogenic mutations at codons 12 and 59 and many silent mutations, accompanied by lower expression of a wild-type allele. Parallel cultures of RWPE-1 cells retained a wild-type KRAS genotype. Copy number analysis and sequencing showed amplification of the mutant KRAS allele. KRAS is expressed as two splice variants, KRAS4a and KRAS4b, where variant 4b is more prevalent in normal cells compared to greater levels of variant 4a seen in tumor cells. 454 Roche sequencing measured KRAS variants in each cell type. We found KRAS4a as the predominant transcript variant in CAsE-PE cells compared to KRAS4b, the variant expressed primarily in RWPE-1 cells and in normal prostate, early passage, primary epithelial cells. Overall, gene expression data were consistent with KRAS-driven proliferation pathways found in spontaneous tumors and malignantly transformed cell lines. Arsenite is recognized as an important environmental carcinogen, but it is not a direct mutagen. Further investigations into this in vitro transformation model will focus on genomic events that cause arsenite-mediated mutation and overexpression of KRAS in CAsE-PE cells.
… These non-tumorigenic cells do not grow in soft agar; however, … RWPE-1 cells and the cancer cell lines derived from it ( 23 ). … The RWPE-1 cell line used in this study was kindly provided …
… of RWPE-1 cell which become tumorigenic in mice. Therefore, … RWPE-1 cell used in this study is between passage 10 to 30. … Evidence for the differential expression of a variant EGF …
Background: Prostate cancer (PCa) phenotypes vary from indolent to aggressive. Molecular subtyping may be useful in predicting aggressive cancers and directing therapy. One such subtype involving deletions of chromodomain helicase DNA binding protein 1 (CHD1), a tumor suppressor gene, are found in 10–26% of PCa tumors. In this study, we evaluate the functional cellular effects that follow CHD1 deletion. Methods: CHD1 was knocked out (KO) in the non-tumorigenic, human papillomavirus 16 (HPV16)-immortalized prostate epithelial cell line, RWPE-1, using CRISPR/Cas9. In vitro assays such as T7 endonuclease assay, western blot, and sequencing were undertaken to characterize the CHD1 KO clones. Morphologic and functional assays for cell adhesion and viability were performed. To study expression of extracellular matrix (ECM) and adhesion molecules, a real-time (RT) profiler assay was performed using RWPE-1 parental, non-target cells (NT2) and CHD1 KO cells. Result: Compared to parental RWPE-1 and non-target cells (NT2), the CHD1 KO cells had a smaller, rounder morphology and were less adherent under routine culture conditions. Compared to parental cells, CHD1 KO cells showed a reduction in ECM and adhesion molecules as well as a greater proportion of viable suspension cells when cultured on standard tissue culture plates and on plates coated with laminin, fibronectin or collagen I. CHD1 KO cells showed a decrease in the expression of secreted protein acidic and rich in cysteine (SPARC), matrix metalloproteinase 2 (MMP2), integrin subunit alpha 2 (ITGA2), integrin subunit alpha 5 (ITGA5), integrin subunit alpha 6 (ITGA6), fibronectin (FN1), laminin subunit beta-3 precursor (LAMB3), collagen, tenascin and vitronectin as compared to parental and NT2 cells. Conclusion: These data suggest that in erythroblast transformation specific (ETS) fusion-negative, phosphatase and tensin homolog (PTEN) wildtype PCa, deletion of CHD1 alters cell-cell and cell-matrix adhesion dynamics, suggesting an important role for CHD1 in the development and progression of PCa.
Background Polyploidy is a prominent feature of many human cancers, and it has long been hypothesized that polyploidy may contribute to tumorigenesis by promoting genomic instability. In this study, we investigated whether polyploidy per se induced by a relevant oncogene can promote genomic instability and tumorigenicity in human epithelial cells. Principal Findings When the oncogenic serine-threonine kinase Pim-1 is overexpressed in immortalized, non-tumorigenic human prostate and mammary epithelial cells, these cells gradually converted to polyploidy and became tumorigenic. To assess the contribution of polyploidy to tumorigenicity, we obtained sorted, matched populations of diploid and polyploid cells expressing equivalent levels of the Pim-1 protein. Spectral karyotyping revealed evidence of emerging numerical and structural chromosomal abnormalities in polyploid cells, supporting the proposition that polyploidy promotes chromosomal instability. Polyploid cells displayed an intact p53/p21 pathway, indicating that the viability of polyploid cells in this system is not dependent on the inactivation of the p53 signaling pathway. Remarkably, only the sorted polyploid cells were tumorigenic in vitro and in vivo. Conclusions Our results support the notion that polyploidy can promote chromosomal instability and the initiation of tumorigenesis in human epithelial cells.
CAsE-PE cells are an arsenic-transformed, human prostate epithelial line containing oncogenic mutations in KRAS compared to immortalized, normal KRAS parent cells, RWPE-1. We previously reported increased copy number of mutated KRAS in CAsE-PE cells, suggesting gene amplification. Here, KRAS flanking genomic and transcriptomic regions were sequenced in CAsE-PE cells for insight into KRAS amplification. Comparison of DNA-Seq and RNA-Seq showed increased reads from background aligning to all KRAS exons in CAsE-PE cells, while a uniform DNA-Seq read distribution occurred in RWPE-1 cells with normal transcript expression. We searched for KRAS fusions in DNA and RNA sequencing data finding a portion of reads aligning to KRAS and viral sequence. After generation of cDNA from total RNA, short and long KRAS probes were generated to hybridize cDNA and KRAS enriched fragments were PacBio sequenced. More KRAS reads were captured from CAsE-PE cDNA versus RWPE-1 by each probe set. Only CAsE-PE cDNA showed KRAS viral fusion transcripts, primarily mapping to LTR and endogenous retrovirus sequences on either 5'- or 3'-ends of KRAS. Most KRAS viral fusion transcripts contained 4 to 6 exons but some PacBio sequences were in unusual orientations, suggesting viral insertions within the gene body. Additionally, conditioned media was extracted for potential retroviral particles. RNA-Seq of culture media isolates identified KRAS retroviral fusion transcripts in CAsE-PE media only. Truncated KRAS transcripts suggested multiple retroviral integration sites occurred within the KRAS gene producing KRAS retroviral fusions of various lengths. Findings suggest activation of endogenous retroviruses in arsenic carcinogenesis should be explored.
A cancer mass is composed of a heterogeneous group of cells, a small part of which constitutes the cancer stem cells since they are less differentiated and have a high capacity to develop cancer. Versican is an extracellular matrix protein located in many human tissues. The mRNA of versican has been shown to have "splicing patterns" as detected by RT-PCR, northern blot analysis, and cDNA sequencing. Based on this knowledge this study aims to reveal the splice variants of versican molecules, which are thought to be involved in the pathogenesis of the DU-145 human prostatic carcinoma cell line and prostatic cancer stem cells isolated from this cell line. In this study, RWPE-1 normal prostatic and DU-145 human prostate cancer cell lines have been used. Prostatic cancer stem cells and the remaining group of non-prostatic-cancer stem cells (bulk population) were isolated according to their CD133+/CD44+. RNA was isolated in all groups, and sequence analysis was accomplished for splicing variants by Illumina NextSeq 500 sequencing system. The results were analyzed by bioinformatic evaluation. As five isoforms of the versican gene in the differential transcript expression are analyzed, it was observed that a significant change was only found in the isoforms Versican 0 and Versican 1. In this study, we explored the function of this molecule which we think to be effective in cancer progression, and suggested that more valuable results can be obtained after the accomplishment of in vivo experiments.
… for the tumorigenic cell lines reflects the variations in … -tumorigenic, RWPE-1 cell line and in three tumorigenic cell lines developed from the same parental RWPE-1 cell line, but derived …
This review focuses on primary cultures of human prostatic epithelial cells and their applications as models of normal and malignant biological behavior. Current abilities to culture cells from normal tissues, from premalignant dysplastic lesions (prostatic intraepithelial neoplasia), from primary adenocarcinomas, and from metastases are described. Evidence for representation of the interrelated cells of the normal prostatic epithelium — stem cells, basal epithelial cells, secretory epithelial cells, transit amplifying cells and neuroendocrine cells — in primary cultures is presented. Comparisons between normal and cancer-derived primary cultures are made regarding biological activities relevant to carcinogenesis, such as proliferation, apoptosis, differentiation, senescence, adhesion, migration, invasion, steroid hormone metabolism, other metabolic pathways and angiogenesis. Analyses of tumor suppressor activity, differential gene expression and cytogenetics in primary cultures have revealed changes relevant to prostate cancer progression. Preclinical studies with primary cultures have provided information useful for designing new strategies for chemoprevention, chemotherapy, cytotoxin therapy, radiation therapy, gene therapy and imaging. While the behavior of normal primary cultures is often used as a basis for comparison with established, immortal prostate cancer cell lines, the most informative studies are performed with donor-matched pairs of normal and malignant primary cultures, grown under identical conditions. Challenges that remain to be addressed if the full potential of primary cultures as a model system is to be realized include isolation, culture and characterization of stem cells, improved methodology to induce or maintain a fully differentiated, androgen-responsive phenotype, and identification of cell surface antigens or other markers with which to purify pure populations of live cancer or premalignant cells apart from non-malignant epithelial cells prior to culture.
… nontransformed human prostatic epithelial cell line BPH-1 in … a 3D culture model of human prostatic epithelial cells with struc… For comparison, we also examined two other immortalized …
… advanced prostate cancer through adipocyte-prostate cancer cell … an androgen-dependent prostate cancer cell line (LNCaP), … cell line was facilitated for comparison with other prostate …
Various preclinical models have been developed to clarify the pathophysiology of prostate cancer (PCa). Traditional PCa cell lines from clinical metastatic lesions, as exemplified by DU-145, PC-3, and LNCaP cells, are useful tools to define mechanisms underlying tumorigenesis and drug resistance. Cell line-based experiments, however, have limitations for preclinical studies because those cells are basically adapted to 2-dimensional monolayer culture conditions, in which the majority of primary PCa cells cannot survive. Recent tissue engineering enables generation of PCa patient-derived xenografts (PDXs) from both primary and metastatic lesions. Compared with fresh PCa tissue transplantation in athymic mice, co-injection of PCa tissues with extracellular matrix in highly immunodeficient mice has remarkably improved the success rate of PDX generation. PDX models have advantages to appropriately recapitulate the molecular diversity, cellular heterogeneity, and histology of original patient tumors. In contrast to PDX models, patient-derived organoid and spheroid PCa models in 3-dimensional culture are more feasible tools for in vitro studies for retaining the characteristics of patient tumors. In this article, we review PCa preclinical model cell lines and their sublines, PDXs, and patient-derived organoid and spheroid models. These PCa models will be applied to the development of new strategies for cancer precision medicine.
Despite monolayer cultures being widely used for cancer drug development and testing, 2D cultures tend to be hypersensitive to chemotherapy and are relatively poor predictors of whether a drug will provide clinical benefit. Whilst generally more complicated, three dimensional (3D) culture systems often better recapitulate true cancer architecture and provide a more accurate drug response. As a step towards making 3D cancer cultures more accessible, we have developed a microwell platform and surface modification protocol to enable high throughput manufacture of 3D cancer aggregates. Herein we use this novel system to characterize prostate cancer cell microaggregates, including growth kinetics and drug sensitivity. Our results indicate that prostate cancer cells are viable in this system, however some non-cancerous prostate cell lines are not. This system allows us to consistently control for the presence or absence of an apoptotic core in the 3D cancer microaggregates. Similar to tumor tissues, the 3D microaggregates display poor polarity. Critically the response of 3D microaggregates to the chemotherapeutic drug, docetaxel, is more consistent with in vivo results than the equivalent 2D controls. Cumulatively, our results demonstrate that these prostate cancer microaggregates better recapitulate the morphology of prostate tumors compared to 2D and can be used for high-throughput drug testing.
Prostate epithelial cells from both normal and cancer tissues, grown in three-dimensional (3D) culture as spheroids, represent promising in vitro models for the study of normal and cancer-relevant patterns of epithelial differentiation. We have developed the most comprehensive panel of miniaturized prostate cell culture models in 3D to date (n = 29), including many non-transformed and most currently available classic prostate cancer (PrCa) cell lines. The purpose of this study was to analyze morphogenetic properties of PrCa models in 3D, to compare phenotypes, gene expression and metabolism between 2D and 3D cultures, and to evaluate their relevance for pre-clinical drug discovery, disease modeling and basic research. Primary and non-transformed prostate epithelial cells, but also several PrCa lines, formed well-differentiated round spheroids. These showed strong cell-cell contacts, epithelial polarization, a hollow lumen and were covered by a complete basal lamina (BL). Most PrCa lines, however, formed large, poorly differentiated spheroids, or aggressively invading structures. In PC-3 and PC-3M cells, well-differentiated spheroids formed, which were then spontaneously transformed into highly invasive cells. These cell lines may have previously undergone an epithelial-to-mesenchymal transition (EMT), which is temporarily suppressed in favor of epithelial maturation by signals from the extracellular matrix (ECM). The induction of lipid and steroid metabolism, epigenetic reprogramming, and ECM remodeling represents a general adaptation to 3D culture, regardless of transformation and phenotype. In contrast, PI3-Kinase, AKT, STAT/interferon and integrin signaling pathways were particularly activated in invasive cells. Specific small molecule inhibitors targeted against PI3-Kinase blocked invasive cell growth more effectively in 3D than in 2D monolayer culture, or the growth of normal cells. Our panel of cell models, spanning a wide spectrum of phenotypic plasticity, supports the investigation of different modes of cell migration and tumor morphologies, and will be useful for predictive testing of anti-cancer and anti-metastatic compounds.
… Still, various 3D cell culture models are in use as in vitro tools for prostate cancer modelling … the differences between results from 2D and 3D culture models, with 2D cell culture rather …
本报告将前列腺研究模型文献归纳为四大逻辑核心:RWPE-1作为非肿瘤基准模型的生物学基础、前列腺上皮与间质间的微环境交互机制、临床肿瘤细胞系的系统比较与局限性分析,以及先进3D体外培养模型的应用趋势。这些维度共同阐述了科研中选用特定细胞系的科学依据,即通过平衡基础对照的严谨性与微环境复杂性的还原,实现对前列腺疾病发生演变及其治疗策略的深度解析。