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The oncogenic role of the In1-ghrelin splicing variant in prostate cancer aggressiveness.

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Date

2017-08-15

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Hormaechea-Agulla, Daniel
Gahete, Manuel D
Jimenez-Vacas, Juan M
Gomez-Gomez, Enrique
Ibañez-Costa, Alejandro
L-Lopez, Fernando
Rivero-Cortes, Esther
Sarmento-Cabral, Andre
Valero-Rosa, Jose
Carrasco-Valiente, Julia

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BioMed Central
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Abstract

The Ghrelin-system is a complex, pleiotropic family composed of several peptides, including native-ghrelin and its In1-ghrelin splicing variant, and receptors (GHSR 1a/b), which are dysregulated in various endocrine-related tumors, where they associate to pathophysiological features, but the presence, functional role, and mechanisms of actions of In1-ghrelin splicing variant in prostate-cancer (PCa), is completely unexplored. Herein, we aimed to determine the presence of key ghrelin-system components (native-ghrelin, In1-ghrelin, GHSR1a/1b) and their potential pathophysiological role in prostate cancer (PCa). In1-ghrelin and native-ghrelin expression was evaluated by qPCR in prostate tissues from patients with high PCa-risk (n = 52; fresh-tumoral biopsies), and healthy-prostates (n = 12; from cystoprostatectomies) and correlated with clinical parameters using Spearman-test. In addition, In1-ghrelin and native-ghrelin was measured in plasma from an additional cohort of PCa-patients with different risk levels (n = 30) and control-healthy patients (n = 20). In vivo functional (proliferation/migration) and mechanistic (gene expression/signaling-pathways) assays were performed in PCa-cell lines in response to In1-ghrelin and native-ghrelin treatment, overexpression and/or silencing. Finally, tumor progression was monitored in nude-mice injected with PCa-cells overexpressing In1-ghrelin, native-ghrelin and empty vector (control). In1-ghrelin, but not native-ghrelin, was overexpressed in high-risk PCa-samples compared to normal-prostate (NP), and this expression correlated with that of PSA. Conversely, GHSR1a/1b expression was virtually absent. Remarkably, plasmatic In1-ghrelin, but not native-ghrelin, levels were also higher in PCa-patients compared to healthy-controls. Furthermore, In1-ghrelin treatment/overexpression, and to a much lesser extent native-ghrelin, increased aggressiveness features (cell-proliferation, migration and PSA secretion) of NP and PCa cells. Consistently, nude-mice injected with PC-3-cells stably-transfected with In1-ghrelin, but not native-ghrelin, presented larger tumors. These effects were likely mediated by ERK1/2-signaling activation and involved altered expression of key oncogenes/tumor suppressor genes. Finally, In1-ghrelin silencing reduced cell-proliferation and PSA secretion from PCa cells. Altogether, our results indicate that In1-ghrelin levels (in tissue) and circulating levels (in plasma) are increased in PCa where it can regulate key pathophysiological processes, thus suggesting that In1-ghrelin may represent a novel biomarker and a new therapeutic target in PCa.

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MeSH Terms

Aged
Animals
Biomarkers, tumor
Cell line, tumor
Cell proliferation
Ghrelin
Heterografts
Humans
Male
Mice
Middle aged
Prostate
Prostatic neoplasms
Protein isoforms

DeCS Terms

Biomarcadores de tumor
Ghrelina
Isoformas de proteínas
Línea celular tumoral
Neoplasias de la próstata
Proliferación celular
Próstata

CIE Terms

Keywords

Aggressiveness, Ghrelin-system, In1-ghrelin variant, Prostate cancer

Citation

Hormaechea-Agulla D, Gahete MD, Jiménez-Vacas JM, Gómez-Gómez E, Ibáñez-Costa A, L-López F, et al. The oncogenic role of the In1-ghrelin splicing variant in prostate cancer aggressiveness. Mol Cancer. 2017 Aug 29;16(1):146