Beta-2-microglobulin expression correlates with high-grade prostate cancer and specific defects in androgen signaling
By: Mink SR, Hodge A, Agus DB, Jain A, Gross ME.

Louis Warschaw Prostate Cancer Center, Sumner M. Redstone Prostate Cancer Research Program, Cedars-Sinai Medical Center, Los Angeles, California.
Prostate. 2010 Mar 26; 70(11):1201-1210.

Abstract

Background

Previously, we identified Beta-2-microglobulin (beta2M) as an androgen-regulated secreted protein elevated in the serum of prostate cancer patients. In this study, we explore an interaction between beta2M expression, prostate cancer tissue, and the androgen signaling axis.

Methods

beta2M expression in relation to clinical and pathologic variables was examined in a tissue microarray representing specimens obtained at the time of radical prostatectomy. Viral vectors were designed to down-regulate beta2M expression, and the effects on androgen-dependent growth, transcriptional regulation, and androgen receptor recruitment was investigated in human prostate cancer cell lines.

Results

Variation in beta2M expression in human prostate cancer is associated with characteristics of clinically aggressive disease such as high tumor grade. Knockdown of beta2M expression in human prostate cancer cells resulted in selective defects in androgen-dependent events including growth, gene regulation, and chromatin assembly.

Conclusions

beta2M expression may provide prognostic information in patients treated with surgery for prostate cancer. Targeting beta2M expression or activity may represent a new and important mechanism to manipulate the androgen signaling axis in patients with prostate cancer. Prostate 70: 1201-1210, 2010. (c) 2010 Wiley-Liss, Inc.

PMID: 20564426 [PubMed - as supplied by publisher] Source: National Library of Medicine.







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