AI Article Synopsis

  • * In laboratory studies, overexpressing S100P in prostate cancer cells promoted tumor growth, reduced cell death, and conferred resistance to chemotherapy drugs like camptothecin.
  • * The research indicates that S100P not only enhances androgen receptor expression, facilitating cancer progression but also highlights its potential as a target for new drug therapies and a biomarker for aggressive forms of prostate cancer.

Article Abstract

S100P protein regulates calcium signal transduction and mediates cytoskeletal interaction, protein phosphorylation and transcriptional control. We have previously shown how elevated S100P levels in prostate cancer strongly correlate with progression to metastatic disease. In our study, we evaluated the functional significance of S100P expression on prostate tumor growth in vitro and in vivo. S100P levels were modulated by overexpressing S100P in PC3 prostate cancer cells and by silencing S100P levels in 22Rv1 prostate cancer cells. Overexpression of S100P in PC3 cells promoted cell growth, increased the percentage of S-phase cells, decreased basal apoptosis rate and promoted anchorage independent growth in soft agar. Furthermore, prostate cancer cells overexpressing S100P were protected against camptothecin-induced apoptosis. Conversely, silencing of S100P in 22Rv1 cells using siRNA resulted in a prominent cytostatic effect. The influence of S100P on tumor growth and metastases were assessed in vivo. S100P-overexpressing PC3 cells had a dramatically increased tumor formation compared to controls. Microarray analysis showed the involvement of growth pathways including increased androgen receptor expression in S100P-overexpressing cells. These results provide the first functional proof that S100P overexpression can upregulate androgen receptor expression and thereby promote prostate cancer progression by increasing cell growth. Moreover, the results confirm the oncogenic nature of S100P in prostate cancer and suggest that the protein may directly confer resistance to chemotherapy. Hence, S100P could be considered a potential drug target or a chemosensitization target, and could also serve as a biomarker for aggressive, hormone-refractory and metastatic prostate cancer.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/ijc.23447DOI Listing

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