Skip to main content
Advertisement
Browse Subject Areas
?

Click through the PLOS taxonomy to find articles in your field.

For more information about PLOS Subject Areas, click here.

  • Loading metrics

Modulation of Androgen Receptor Signaling in Hormonal Therapy-Resistant Prostate Cancer Cell Lines

Abstract

Background

Prostate epithelial cells depend on androgens for survival and function. In (early) prostate cancer (PCa) androgens also regulate tumor growth, which is exploited by hormonal therapies in metastatic disease. The aim of the present study was to characterize the androgen receptor (AR) response in hormonal therapy-resistant PC346 cells and identify potential disease markers.

Methodology/Principal Findings

Human 19K oligoarrays were used to establish the androgen-regulated expression profile of androgen-responsive PC346C cells and its derivative therapy-resistant sublines: PC346DCC (vestigial AR levels), PC346Flu1 (AR overexpression) and PC346Flu2 (T877A AR mutation). In total, 107 transcripts were differentially-expressed in PC346C and derivatives after R1881 or hydroxyflutamide stimulations. The AR-regulated expression profiles reflected the AR modifications of respective therapy-resistant sublines: AR overexpression resulted in stronger and broader transcriptional response to R1881 stimulation, AR down-regulation correlated with deficient response of AR-target genes and the T877A mutation resulted in transcriptional response to both R1881 and hydroxyflutamide. This AR-target signature was linked to multiple publicly available cell line and tumor derived PCa databases, revealing that distinct functional clusters were differentially modulated during PCa progression. Differentiation and secretory functions were up-regulated in primary PCa but repressed in metastasis, whereas proliferation, cytoskeletal remodeling and adhesion were overexpressed in metastasis. Finally, the androgen-regulated genes ENDOD1, MCCC2 and ACSL3 were selected as potential disease markers for RT-PCR quantification in a distinct set of human prostate specimens. ENDOD1 and ACSL3 showed down-regulation in high-grade and metastatic PCa, while MCCC2 was overexpressed in low-grade PCa.

Conclusions/Significance

AR modifications altered the transcriptional response to (anti)androgens in therapy-resistant cells. Furthermore, selective down-regulation of genes involved in differentiation and up-regulation of genes promoting proliferation and invasion suggest a disturbed balance between the growth and differentiation functions of the AR pathway during PCa progression. These findings may have implications in the current treatment and development of novel therapeutical approaches for metastatic PCa.

Introduction

Prostate cancer is the most frequently diagnosed non-cutaneous malignancy in men and the second leading cause of cancer deaths in the western countries [1]. Prostate cancer is a highly heterogeneous condition, exhibiting a wide range of biological and clinical manifestations. While some patients develop an asymptomatic disease course and rather die with the cancer than from the cancer, others present with a more aggressive and/or more advanced disease at the time of diagnosis [2]. When the tumor is confined to the prostate, it can be efficiently treated by radical surgery and/or radiation therapy, but once the tumor has disseminated, systemic therapy is required. Since prostate cancer cells require androgens for their survival and growth, the golden standard for the treatment of evasive prostate tumors is androgen ablation through chemical or surgical castration, which may be combined with the administration of androgen receptor (AR) antagonists [2]. Most patients will benefit from this hormonal therapy, the tumors may shrink and the symptoms ameliorate. However, eventually all cancers will become resistant and recur as therapy-refractory or castration-resistant disease, for which at the moment no curative treatment exists [3], [4]. The AR pathway is very versatile, being involved in many biological processes including cellular proliferation, regulation of apoptosis and differentiation [5]. The balance between these different functions dictates the homeostasis of the prostatic gland. A pertinent question is how prostate cancer cells that are initially dependent on androgens can resume growth in an androgen-deprived environment. One possibility is that prostate cancer cells achieve this by adapting their AR pathway to the low androgen/high antiandrogen levels, for example by mutation, amplification or truncation to a constitutively active AR, deregulation of AR cofactors and/or intratumoral androgen production [6], [7]. On the other hand, cancer cells may activate alternative growth pathways, while shutting down tumor suppressors and apoptotic signals [6], [7].

In the present study, we focused on the role of the AR pathway in prostate cancer progression. The expression pattern of androgen-regulated genes in androgen-responsive and castration-resistant cell lines was established, with the goal to: (i) determine whether the AR pathway is still functionally active in the hormonal therapy-resistant PC346 cells; (ii) identify the mechanism(s) by which the AR pathway may be adjusted to the low androgen/high antiandrogen levels; (iii) identify androgen-regulated genes that could potentially be used in the diagnosis/prognosis of prostate cancer or as a therapeutic target. For this purpose, we used microarray technology to characterize the transcriptional program activated by the synthetic androgen R1881 and the antiandrogen hydroxyflutamide. As model system we used the PC346 cell lines (Table 1): the androgen-responsive PC346C parental cell line and its therapy-resistant derivative sublines PC346DCC, PC346Flu1 and PC346Flu2 [8]. These castration-resistant sublines reproduce common AR modifications observed in therapy-resistant disease: AR down-regulation (PC346DCC), AR mutation (PC346Flu2) and AR overexpression (PC346Flu1), making it a unique and valuable model for this study.

thumbnail
Table 1. Characteristics of the PC346 cell line panel: AR status and hormone response.

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0023144.t001

Methods

Ethics Statement

Normal and tumor samples from patients were obtained from the frozen tissue bank of the Erasmus Medical Center (Rotterdam, the Netherlands). The specimens were collected between 1984 and 2001. The experimental protocols were approved by the Erasmus MC Medical Ethics Committee according to the Medical Research Involving Human Subjects Act.

Reagents and cell lines

The basic culture medium used in the maintenance of PC346 cell lines consisted of DMEM-F12 medium (Cambrex BioWhitaker, Belgium) supplemented with 2% fetal calf serum (FCS; PAN Biotech GmbH, Aidenbach, Germany), 1% insulin-transferrin-selenium (Gibco BRL), 0.01% bovine serum albumin (Boehringer Mannheim, Germany), 10 ng/ml epidermal growth factor (Sigma-Aldrich), penicillin/streptomycin antibiotics (100 U/ml penicillin, 100 mg/ml streptomycin; BioWhitaker, Belgium); plus the following additions: 100 ng/ml fibronectin (Harbor Bio-Products, Tebu-bio, The Netherlands), 20 mg/ml fetuine (ICN Biomedicals, The Netherlands), 50 ng/ml choleratoxin, 0.1 mM phosphoethanolamine, 0.6 ng/ml triiodothyronine and 500 ng/ml dexametason (all from Sigma). PC346C cells were maintained in culture in the complete medium mentioned above, supplemented with 0.1 nM 17-methyltrienolone (R1881; NEN, Boston MA, USA). PC346DCC selection medium was supplemented as described above, but depleted from androgens by using dextran-coated charcoal (DCC) treated FCS. PC346Flu1 and PC346Flu2 culture medium was also androgen depleted by using 2% DCC-FCS, and supplemented with 1 µM of hydroxyflutamide (OH-flutamide, Schering-Plough Research Institute, New Jersey, USA). For the hormone stimulations, a simplified version of the culture medium was used, containing 2% DCC- FCS without the above mentioned additions (minimal medium). Cells were grown in T25 Primaria™ tissue culture flasks (BD Biosciences Benelux N.V, The Netherlands) at 37°C under 5% CO2 humidified atmosphere.

Hormone stimulations and expression microarray analysis

Cells were seeded in their respective selection medium to reach ∼50% confluency and allowed to attach overnight. The next day, medium was replaced with 2% DCC-FCS in minimal medium and cells were starved for 48 h, to bring AR activity to basal levels before the hormone stimulations. Subsequently, cells were stimulated with either vehicle, 1 nM R1881 or 1 µM OH-flutamide for 4, 8 or 16 h. After stimulations, cells were rinsed twice with PBS and stored at −20°C until RNA isolation. Total RNA was isolated with RNAzol B reagent (Campro Scientific, Veenendaal, The Netherlands) and further purified through RNeasy columns (Qiagen) with on-column DNA digestion, according to the manufacturer's protocol. RNA quality was checked on 1% agarose gel.

Cy3- or Cy5-labelled RNA probes were produced by incorporating amino-allyl UTP during RNA amplification, followed by coupling to N-hydroxysuccinimide modified dye. Briefly, 3 µg RNA was used for a T7-based linear mRNA amplification protocol, described previously [9]. Amino-allyl UTP, plus equal amount of unmodified rUTP, was incorporated into aRNA with T7 Megascript Kit (all from Ambion), according to manufacturer's protocol. Amplified RNA was purified and concentrated using Microcon-YM 30 columns (Amicon®) to rinse three times with 300 µl RNAse-free water. Finally, 2 µg aminoallyl-modified RNA, in a maximum of 3.33 µl of RNAse-free water, was incubated with 1.66 µl sodium bicarbonate buffer (0.3 M, pH 9) and 5 µl Cy3- or Cy5-dye (CyScribe Post-Labeling Kit, Amersham, NJ, USA), for 1 h in the dark at room temperature. Reaction was stopped with 5 µl 4 M hydroxylamine HCl (Sigma), contra-labelled probes were combined and purified/concentrated using Microcon-YM 30 columns. Probe was collected in 5–15 µl final volume and resuspended in 80 µl Ambion hybridization buffer number 1.

For the microarray we used double-dye oligoarrays representing about 15,000 human genes, on which labelled hormone-stimulated RNA was cohybridized with its contra-labelled time-matched vehicle (ethanol) control. Two microarrays were performed per condition: in one experiment the stimulated samples were labeled with Cy3 and the unstimulated reference with Cy5, in the other experiment in vice-versa (dye-swap); this was done to exclude dye-preferential binding to oligonucleotides on the microarray. In addition, two independent cell passages were used for each of these experiments, to account for the biological variability.

The oligoarrays used in this study were produced at the Erasmus Center for Biomics. Briefly, a human 18,584 oligonucleotides library (Compugen, Sigma-Genosys) was spotted on aminosilane slides using a Virtek Chipwriter Professional arrayer (Virtek Vision International, Waterloo, Canada). Control spots included landmarks, spotting buffer, alien oligonucleotides (SpotReport Alien Oligo Array, La Jolla, Stratagene), poly d[A]40–60, salmon sperm DNA, and human COT-1 DNA. Before the hybridization, microarray slides were prehybridized in 5x SSC, 0.05% SDS, 4% BSA solution for 30 min at 45°C, washed twice with RNAse-free water for 2 min, rinsed with isopropanol and spin-dried for 3 min at 1500 g. Microarray hybridizations were performed overnight at 45°C, with continuous agitation, in a HS4800 Hybridization Station (Tecan Benelux BV). Finally, the arrays were washed automatically in the Hybridization Station using: 2x SSC/0.05% SDS (at 45°C), 1x SSC and 0.2x SSC (at room temperature), and dried under a stream of N2, before scanning.

Data extraction and analysis

Arrays were scanned in a ScanArray Express HT scanner (Perkin Elmer, Nederland BV) and spot intensities were quantified using Imagene software (Bio Discovery Inc, El Sequndo, CA, USA). To balance Cy3 and Cy5 spot intensities, Loewess normalization per subarray was performed using limma-package (http://bioinf.wehi.edu.au/limma/) from Bioconductor (http://www.bioconductor.org) [10], [11]. To scale between arrays, the global median intensity per array was set at 1000. Dye intensities below 200 were then thresholded at 200, to minimize noise and make fold-change on the low-intensity range more robust against outliers. Spots with intensities below the threshold (200) for both Cy3 and Cy5 channels, in more than 50% (>3/6) of the arrays for each time-course, were excluded from the analysis. Sample to vehicle-control ratios were then calculated and 2log transformed. Spots that showed opposite effects for the dye-swap/biological replicates were excluded from further analysis; effects were called opposite if the mean 2log ratio for the three time-points tested were ≥0,5 for one dye and below ≤-0,5 for the dye-swap. Following normalization and all the above-mentioned quality controls, the 2log intensity ratios from both replicates were averaged for each time point. This data was stored in SRS7 (Sequence Retrieval System version 7, Lion Bioscience AG, Heidenberg, Germany) [12], which was also used for the comparisons with other previously published/publicly available databases [13], [14], [15], [16], [17], [18], [19], [20], [21], [22], [23], [24].

Hierarchical clustering and data visualization was performed using Cluster and TreeView programs (Eisen Labs: http://rana.lbl.gov), respectively. Significance Analysis of Microarrays (SAM; http://www-stat.stanford.edu/~tibs/SAM) was used to determine which genes were statistically different between stimulated samples and non-stimulated references. Gene ontology clustering was performed using Database for Annotation, Visualization and Integrated Discovery (DAVID: http://david.abcc.ncifcrf.gov) [25], [26]. The pathway and functional analyses were generated through the use of Ingenuity Pathways Analysis (Ingenuity® Systems, www.ingenuity.com).

All the microarray data is MIAMI compliant and has been deposited in the Gene Expression Omnibus repository (http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/geo/), under the GEO accession number GSE22914.

cDNA synthesis and RT-PCR analysis

Total RNA was isolated as described above and cDNA was synthesized using MMLV-reverse transcriptase kit and Oligo(dT)12–18 primer (Invitrogen), according to manufacturer's protocol. cDNA samples were stored at −20°C. For the validation of the microarray results, quantitative real-time PCR analysis was performed using an ABI Prism 7700 Sequence Detection System (Applied Biosystems, Foster City, CA). KLK2, PART1, TPD52, FKBP5, GPR88, STEAP1, TRIB1 and ID3 were quantified with ABsolute QPCR SYBR Green ROX Mix (Thermo Scientific) and 330 nM of each primer, according to the manufacturer's protocol. Primers were designed using the computer program Oligo Primer Analysis Software version 6.22 (Molecular Biology Insights Inc, USA). Gene specificity was checked by BLAST and, whenever possible, intron-spanning primers were chosen to avoid amplification of contaminating DNA. Primer sequences are described in Table 2. TMPRSS2, PSA and GAPDH were quantified by TaqMan real-time PCR analysis, using ABsolute QPCR ROX Mix (Thermo Scientific). TMPRSS2 (assay ID Hs00237175_m1) and GAPDH (assay ID Hs99999905_m1) kits were purchased from Applied Biosystems and run following the manufacturer's instructions. PSA was quantified as described previously [8]. For each gene, a standard curve was constructed from serial dilutions of a reverse-transcribed PC346 RNA pool, which was then used to determine the quantity of target message from the threshold cycle (Ct) value. The GAPDH housekeeping gene was used as endogenous control.

thumbnail
Table 2. Primer sequences used in the quantitative RT-PCR analysis.

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0023144.t002

For the quantitative PCR analysis of the human tissue panel, normal and tumor samples from patients were obtained from the frozen tissue bank of the Erasmus Medical Center (Rotterdam, the Netherlands). Additional information about these specimens was provided previously [27]. TaqMan real-time PCR analysis was performed in an ABI Prism 7700 Sequence Detection System (Applied Biosystems, Foster City, CA), using AmpliTaq Gold DNA polymerase (Applied Biosystems), according to manufacturer's specifications. Validated primers and probes from TaqMan Gene Expression Assays (Applied Biosystems) were used for quantification of ACSL3 (Hs01071247_m1), MCCC2 (Hs00223257_m1), ENDOD1 (Hs00826684_m1) and GAPDH (Hs99999905_m1), according to the PCR settings provided by Applied Biosystems. PBGD was quantified using 330 nM of primers forward: 5′-CAT GTC TGG TAA CGG CAA TG-3′ and reverse: 5′-GTA CGA GGC TTT CAA TGT TG-3′ primers, in Power SybrGreen PCR Master mix (Applied Biosystems), according to thermocycling protocol recommended by the manufacturer. Transcript quantities for each sample were normalized against the average of two endogenous references and relative to a calibrator. The two housekeeping genes used as endogenous references were PBGD and GAPDH; a mixture of cDNAs from prostate carcinoma xenografts was used as the calibrator. Graphs and statistics were performed with GraphPad Prism (version 3.0). P-values <0.05 were considered significant.

Results

Gene expression pattern of PC346 cells treated with R1881 and hydroxyflutamide

To characterize the expression profile of androgen receptor target genes in prostate cancer cells, we used expression microarray analysis on the PC346 cell line panel incubated with the androgen analogue R1881 or the antiandrogen OH-flutamide. The PC346 model system is composed of four cell lines: the androgen-sensitive PC346C and three hormonal therapy-resistant sublines, derived from the parental PC346C by long-term androgen ablation (PC346DCC), supplemented with the antiandrogen OH-flutamide (PC346Flu1 and PC346Flu2). All these sublines exhibit different properties with respect to AR status and responsiveness (summarized in Table 1) [8].

For the expression analysis we stimulated the cells with 1 nM R1881 or 1 µM OH-flutamide for 4, 8 or 16 h and cohybridized the labeled RNA with its time-matched vehicle (ethanol) control. Two microarrays were performed per condition, using two independent cell passages in dye-swap, to account for the biological variability and potential dye-preferential effects. Early time-points were chosen in order to enrich for primary AR targets, and minimize indirect secondary targets.

The two replicates per time-point were averaged and a total of 107 differentially-expressed transcripts were selected to constitute the AR pathway signature: 74 up-regulated and 33 down-regulated by R1881 and/or OH-flutamide (Tables 3, 4, 5, 6). Spots were considered to be differentially-expressed if the absolute 2log ratio ≥0.5 (ratio ≥1.42 or ≤0.71) for all three time-points, for at least one cell type. Significance Analysis of Microarrays (SAM) was used to determine which genes were statistically different between stimulated samples and non-stimulated references. In the experimental design, we chose to perform the hormonal stimulations at 3 different time points so that transcripts with a faster or slower response would not be missed. However, the time effect was negligible: most androgen-regulated transcripts were differentially expressed at all time three time points and for the statistical analysis we decided to pool all the 3 time points per condition. In total, there were 253 SAM significant genes, with a false discovery rate (FDR) set at 0.05 (Tables S1, S2, S3, S4). From our 107 signature transcripts, considered differentially-expressed according to the above-mentioned selection criteria, 77 were statistically significant by SAM. Indeed, the expression of the remaining 30 (28%) transcripts of our AR-target signature varied across the 3 time-points, so that these did not reach statistical significance in the pooled SAM analysis. This variation cannot be explained by a apparently predominant kinetic pattern, nor can it be attributed to the 4 h time point in particular. Since temporal regulation was observed for such few transcripts, no analysis was performed on the dynamics of gene-expression variation across time. The expression ratios presented in the tables and Figure 4 are from the average of all three time-points per condition. Finally, the fact that a considerable number of SAM significant transcripts were not included in our AR-regulated signature was due to our choice to set the 2log ratio threshold at 0.5.

The androgen-sensitive PC346C subline responded to the R1881 stimulation with increased expression of 18 genes, while 2 were down-regulated. Among these are some well-known AR regulated genes, such as KLK2, STEAP1, TMPRSS2 and FKBP5. The therapy-resistant sublines showed distinct responses to R1881 and OH-flutamide. PC346Flu1, which expresses 4-fold higher AR levels than the parental cell line, showed a “super-activation” of the AR pathway by R1881, not only in the magnitude of the gene expression but also in the number of regulated genes (20 androgen-regulated genes in the parental PC346C versus 91 in PC346Flu1). Conversely, the PC346DCC subline, which expresses residual levels of AR protein, showed no detectable changes in gene expression after the hormone treatments. Neither PC346C, PC346DCC nor PC346Flu1 showed significant alterations in the transcriptional profile in response to OH-flutamide. In contrast, PC346Flu2 cells, which express the T877A mutated AR, responded to both R1881 and this antiandrogen, although the response to the latter was weaker (14 genes up-regulated by R1881 versus 8 up-regulated by OH-flutamide; Tables 3 and 5, respectively).

Validation of the microarray data

The microarray data was validated by two approaches: an experimental approach using quantitative RT-PCR, and a bioinformatics approach linking our gene signature to a set of publicly available databases on androgen response. We selected 10 androgen-regulated genes to be further validated by quantitative RT-PCR: PSA, KLK2, PART1, TPD52, GPR88, FKBP5, TMPRSS2, STEAP1, ID3 and TRIB1. It is worth noting that our microarray analysis did not detect regulation of PSA expression in response to the hormonal treatments, but since this is a prominent AR target gene, it was included in the RT-PCR validation step. The quantitative PCR analysis confirmed the differential expression of all selected genes in the same direction predicted by the microarray analysis (Fig. 1). Furthermore, the RT-PCR also showed a stronger effect of the hormone-treatment on the PC346Flu1 cell line, in contrast to the almost absent induction of PC346DCC cells, when compared to the parental PC346C, for most genes analysed. As observed in the microarray assay, PC346Flu2 showed equivalent responses to R1881 and OH-flutamide for many regulated genes (Fig. 1, Tables 3, 4, 5, 6).

thumbnail
Figure 1. Validation of the microarray results.

Quantitative RT-PCR analysis of a set of 10 androgen-regulated genes in PC346 cell lines. Cells were stimulated with 1 nM R1881 (R1881), 1 mM OH-flutamide (Flut) or vehicle control (DCC-FCS) for 16h. The graphs show the Mean (± SE) of the normalized gene expression (n.g.e.) relative to the housekeeping gene GAPDH, for two independent cell passages. ID3 and TRIB1 were androgen-repressed in the microarray assays, whereas the other genes were up-regulated by androgens.

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0023144.g001

thumbnail
Table 6. List of genes down-regulated by hydroxyflutamide.

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0023144.t006

In the past years, a series of studies have been published that analyzed gene expression in response to androgens stimulation in cell lines and xenografts (Table 7). Of the 107 transcripts in our signature, 73 were present in at least 3 of the 5 databases and were included for further analysis. More than 90% of the linked genes overlapped with previously reported androgen-regulated targets. Genes with the strongest inductions in our present work also showed consistently high inductions in multiple previous reports, suggesting that the products of these genes may play a basic role in the biological function of the prostate (Fig. 2). Using our unique cell line panel, we were able to identify novel androgen-responsive genes such as MAFB, KLF9, NFIB, STBD1, BIK and HLX.

thumbnail
Figure 2. Expression profile of androgen-responsive genes in PC346 cells linked to publicly available databases on AR transcriptional regulation.

On the left side, PC346C, PC346Flu1 and PC34Flu2 were exposed to 1 nM R1881 or 1 µM OH-flutamide for 4, 8 and 16h, whereas PC346DCC was stimulated with 1 nM R1881 only. On the right side, our gene signature was assessed in the databases from DePrimo et al., Nelson et al., Nickols et al., Wang et al. and Hendriksen et al. (see Table 7 for database details). Heat-map is presented for the 2log expression ratio between hormone-treated samples and respective time-matched vehicle controls. Red and green colors represent induction and repression, respectively, whereas black indicates no regulation. Grey squares indicate missing data due to low expression, poor data quality or absence of probes for the respective transcript in the array platform used for the study.

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0023144.g002

thumbnail
Table 7. Description of the androgen-regulation and prostate cancer databases linked via SRS.

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0023144.t007

thumbnail
Table 8. Summary of significantly enriched Gene Ontology (GO) categories.

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0023144.t008

Biologic processes coordinated by the AR pathway

The androgen-regulated signature genes were classified according to Gene Ontology (GO) Biological Processes using the Database for Annotation, Visualization and Integrated Discovery (DAVID: http://david.abcc.ncifcrf.gov) [25], [26].

Consistent with the physiological roles of androgens, this approach revealed that the AR target genes selected in the present study operate in the regulation of transcription and intracellular signaling pathways, the metabolism of proteins, lipids and carbohydrates, and the regulation of cell proliferation and differentiation (Fig. 3A). The largest category includes genes encoding for transcription factors and transcription regulators, such as NFIB, KLF9, HIF1A, MAFB, EHF, NCOR1, NCOR2, PIAS1 and several zinc finger proteins (ZNF189, ZBTB10, ZBTB16 and CASZ1). This was followed by genes involved in intracellular signal transduction, including the G protein-coupled receptors pathway (GPR88, RGS2, GNAI1), small GTPases of the Ras family (RHOB, RHOU), mitogen-activated protein kinase cascade (MAP2K4, MKNK2, TRIB1) and other protein kinases/phosphatases (PPM1A, PPP2CB, PIK3R3, SGK1). Other AR responsive genes have an effect on cellular proliferation through regulation of cell cycle and apoptotic processes (e.g. RCC1, BBX, BIK, TP53INP1). Concomitant with the role of androgens on prostate development and maturation, another major cluster included genes involved in cellular differentiation, such as TPD52, TWSG1, NDRG1, ID1 and ID3. Finally, androgen induced the metabolism of proteins, carbohydrates and lipids that contribute to the production and secretion of prostatic fluid. Such R1881 target genes included MTHFD1, PSPH, PSAT1 and MCCC2, encoding enzymes in the metabolism of methionine, serine and leucine amino acids, respectively. Furthermore, up-regulation of the translation initiation factor EIF2C3 potentially promotes peptide synthesis. Moreover, genes participating in protein folding (PDIAS5, FKBP5), glycosylation (FUT8, GALNT1) and trafficking (DMN1L, KDELR2) were also regulated by R1881. Apart from proteins and amino acids, prostatic fluid is also rich in lipids, polyamines, sorbitol and several metal ions. Indeed, R1881 also stimulated expression of ACSL3 and ELOVL5, which participate in the elongation of fatty-acids, spermine synthase (SMS), part of the polyamine synthetic pathway, sorbitol dehydrogenase (SORD), secreted by the prostate into the seminal fluid, and the ion channels ACCN4 and KCNJ10.

thumbnail
Figure 3. Biological processes regulated by the selected androgen-target genes.

(A) Pie-graph representing genes categorized according to most prominent biological function. Gene ontology annotations were extracted using DAVID [25], [26]. (B) Involvement of the AR pathway genes in disease determined using Ingenuity Pathway Analysis (Ingenuity® Systems, www.ingenuity.com).

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0023144.g003

To automate the functional classification, quantify the degree of enrichment of each cluster and select statistically significant functional categories we used the DAVID Functional Annotation Clustering tool. This tool identified 6 statistically significant Annotation Clusters, which associated with the metabolism of organic acids (lipids and amino acids), apoptosis, cell differentiation, developmental processes, regulation of transcription and regulation of cellular processes (Table 8).

The involvement of androgen-regulated genes in pathological conditions was further investigated by using the Ingenuity database (Ingenuity® Systems, www.ingenuity.com). The strongest associations were found for cancer, reproductive system, dermatological and cardiovascular diseases (Fig. 3B).

The AR pathway in prostate cancer development and progression

To investigate how the AR pathway is modulated during the development and progression of prostate cancer we linked our androgen-regulated gene signature to seven independent prostate cancer microarray databases. These studies included specimens of “normal prostate” and prostate tumors from diverse disease stages, whose main characteristics are summarized in Table 7. A total of 89 hormone-responsive genes were present in at least 4 of the 7 databases, and were selected for further analysis. In figure 4, we show the hierarchical clustering of the R1881-responsive genes (first block of 4 columns), next to primary cancer versus normal prostate (second block), metastasis versus primary cancer (third block), and finally recurrent versus non-recurrent and hormonal therapy-resistant versus hormone-naïve disease (fourth block). The clustering analysis revealed four major gene groups: R1881-repressed and up-regulated during progression to metastatic disease (Cluster 1), R1881-repressed and down-regulated during progression (Cluster 2), R1881-induced and down-regulated during progression (Cluster 3), R1881-induced and up-regulated during progression (Cluster 4). About one third of the R1881-regulated genes was differentially-expressed between primary tumors and normal prostate in at least two databases. To this group contributed mainly R1881-induced genes that showed up-regulation in prostate cancer. These are genes that play a role in the production of prostatic fluid and in secretory function of the prostate, including SORD, ACSL3, ELOVL5, FKBP5, PDIA5, GLUD1 and UAP1. However, when comparing metastatic cancer to primary tumors, 23 of the R1881-induced genes were down-regulated (Fig. 4, Cluster 3), while 11 androgen-repressed genes were up-regulated (Fig. 4, Cluster 1). In total, these two clusters made up a considerable fraction (40%) of the androgen-responsive genes, and their expression pattern in metastasis suggests that the AR pathway is selectively down-regulated at this stage of the disease. In contrast, another group of R1881-stimulated genes showed increased expression in metastasis compared to primary tumors (Fig. 4, Cluster 4). This cluster is enriched for genes involved in survival/cellular proliferation (MAFB, ELL2, TPD52, EHF, HIF1A, HLX and SGK) and cell remodeling/adhesion (RHOU, SHROOM3, MORC4, TWSG1). Conversely, a group of R1881-repressed genes down-regulated in metastasis included genes involved in cellular differentiation and development (ID1, ID3, LMO4 and TPD52L1) (Fig. 4, Cluster 2). Finally, we assessed the activation state of the AR pathway in recurrent and in hormonal therapy-resistant disease. The collection of datasets in this category is limited to three non-concordant databases: Best et al. and Tamura et al. compared hormone-naïve with hormonal therapy-resistant samples, Singh et al. evaluated biochemical recurrence following radical prostatectomy. Therefore, the overlap between the three databases was modest. Nevertheless, the general trend is the same as for the progression of primary cancer to metastatic disease: genes down-regulated in metastasis tend to be down-regulated in recurrent versus non-recurrent and/or hormonal therapy-resistant versus homone-naïve disease, and vice-versa. These results suggest that the common mechanisms may govern the progression to different states of prostate cancer disease.

thumbnail
Figure 4. Expression of androgen-responsive genes in prostate cancer samples from patients.

(A) Heat-map representation of publicly available expression data from human prostate cancer using the AR-regulated 107-genes signature (see Table 7 for database details). (B) Androgen-responsive genes selected for further quantitative PCR analysis. PC: prostate cancer; NP: normal prostate; Met: metastatic samples; AD: androgen-dependent; AI: hormonal therapy-resistant; (Non)Rec: (non)recurrent after radical prostatectomy. Color scheme as described for Figure 2.

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0023144.g004

AR target genes as markers for disease diagnosis and prognosis

The last objective of this study was to identify genes that could possibly be used as markers in the diagnosis of prostate cancer or in predicting the course of disease. We selected three R1881-regulated genes to be analyzed by quantitative PCR on normal prostate and prostate carcinoma samples obtained in our institute: ACSL3, MCCC2 and ENDOD1. The human prostate specimens obtained in our institute have been previously validated for marker research [14]. For this purpose, the well-known prostate cancer markers Hepsin and AMACR have been tested as positive controls [28], [29]. Both markers showed significantly higher expression in the prostate carcinoma than in the normal prostate samples, confirming that our panel is representative and suitable for the research of novel diagnostic/ prognostic markers [14]. The candidate genes were selected based on their strong androgen-induction, potential pathological function but, most importantly, on the fact that their expression was confirmed to be altered across multiple prostate cancer databases analyzed (Fig. 4B). In this sense, ACSL3 seems to be slightly up-regulated in primary prostate tumors and strongly repressed in metastatic cancer. Furthermore, fusion of the ACSL3 gene to the ETS family member ETV1 has recently been reported, making it an interesting gene for follow-up [30]. MCCC2 was strongly up-regulated in primary cancer, although its expression in metastasis and hormonal therapy-resistant disease varies in the different databases (Fig. 4B). Finally, ENDOD1 was one of the strongest R1881-induced genes in our microarray profile, and showed decreased expression in metastasis and therapy-resistant tumors, suggesting a possible role in disease progression (Fig. 4B).

Quantitative PCR analysis included 21 samples of normal prostate tissue (adjacent to cancer), 73 primary prostate tumors and 13 lymph node metastasis. The primary tumors consist of 52 low-grade samples (Gleason 5–7), 21 samples from late-stage poorly-differentiated tumors (Gleason 8–10) and 9 hormonal therapy-resistant specimens, obtained from patients operated by radical prostatectomy or transurethral resection of the prostate (TURP). ACSL3 expression was significantly decreased during progression from low-grade to high-grade tumors (P = 0.005; Fig. 5A). ENDOD1 exhibited a stepwise down-regulation during disease progression (P<0.05 for Post linear-trend test), which is consistent with the results from the prostate cancer databases (Fig. 5B). Finally, MCCC2 was up-regulated in well-differentiated tumors (P<0.005), but its expression decreased during progression to high-grade cancer (P<0.05; Fig. 5C). This biphasic expression of MCCC2 during prostate cancer progression might explain the variation observed across the different databases mentioned above. Furthermore, expression of all three candidate genes was decreased during progression to therapy-resistant disease, although the trend for MCCC2 was not statistically significant.

thumbnail
Figure 5. Quantitative RT-PCR analysis of three androgen-responsive genes ACSL3, ENDOD1 and MCCC2 in a distinct set of prostate samples.

NAP: normal adjacent prostate; LG-PC: low-grade prostate cancer, including Gleason score from 5-7; HG-PC: high-grade prostate cancer, including Gleason score from 8-10; LNmet: lymph-node metastasis; HNPC: hormone-naïve prostate cancer (primary site); HRPC: hormonal therapy-resistant prostate cancer (primary site); (*) p-value ≤0.05 and (**) p-value ≤0.005 using Mann-Whitney two-tailed test; (***) p-value ≤0.05 with Post linear-trend test.

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0023144.g005

Discussion

In order to design better diagnostic and prognostic tools for prostate cancer and to develop more efficient therapies for late stage disease, it is essential to methodically understand the processes by which this disease develops and progresses. In this sense the AR pathway is of great interest for clinicians, researchers and pharmaceutical industry as it plays a crucial role in prostate malignancy. To investigate whether the AR pathway is functionally active in hormonal therapy-resistant prostate disease, we started by establishing the expression program of AR target genes in PC346 cell lines stimulated with R1881 or hydroxyflutamide.

R1881 stimulation of the androgen-sensitive PC346C subline resulted in differential expression of 20 genes, including the well-known AR target genes TMPRSS2, KLK2 and TPD52. Consistent with the expression of wild-type AR, OH-flutamide did not mediate transcription of AR-target genes in PC346C cells.

The castration-resistant PC346DCC subline, which expresses very low levels of the receptor, showed to be insensitive to R1881 stimulation. These results suggest that the AR pathway is not essential for the growth of PC346DCC cells. Alternative survival and growth pathways involved in the AR bypass in PC346DCC are under investigation and were recently published elsewhere [31].

Conversely, the cell line overexpressing the AR, PC346Flu1, showed a “super-activation” of the pathway, not only in the number of regulated genes but also in the strength of this regulation. This reveals two important aspects: (i) although these cells have been cultured in the absence of androgens for longer than two years, the AR is still functional and can be activated by the presence of its ligand; (ii) the AR seems to be hyper-sensitive, likely due to the high levels of the receptor, which may be sufficient to support cell growth under the hormone-depleted conditions. Interestingly, PC346Flu1 proliferation is inhibited by physiological concentrations of androgens, both in vivo and in vitro, suggesting that AR “super-activation” is unfavorable for cell growth, possibly by inducing cellular differentiation [8]. This is in line with a previous report, which showed that prostate epithelial cells tolerate a narrow-range of AR expression and activity, by undergoing apoptosis in the absence of AR expression and cell cycle arrest upon AR hyper-stimulation [32]. How AR overexpression can lead to receptor activation under androgen-depleted conditions is still not fully understood. Hypothetically, there are two possible mechanisms: increased sensitivity to residual androgen levels or constitutive ligand-independent activation. Some authors have proposed that increased AR levels not only sensitised the receptor to residual androgen concentrations but also conferred agonistic activity to AR antagonists [33], [34]. However, previous results showed that PC346Flu1 proliferation was optimal in the absence of androgens and was unaffected by flutamide supplementation [8]. The lack of agonistic activity of flutamide on PC346Flu1 cells was further confirmed in the present expression microarray analysis. Likewise, Konkontis et al. also failed to replicate the antagonist to agonist conversion in hormone-refractory LNCaP-104R cells, which express 15-fold more AR protein that respective androgen-sensitive parental LNCaP-104S cells [35], [36]. These results suggest that the proliferation of PC346Flu1 cells is not dependent on residual androgens, but is maintained by constitutive AR activation resistant to AR antagonists. This view is supported by findings from Dehm et al., which, by introducing disabling mutations in the ligand-binding domain, showed that ligand binding was not necessary for constitutive AR activation in C4-2 cells [37]. The authors also observed increased transactivation activity of the AR N-terminal domain in these cells, compared to parental LNCaP. Similar processes could be playing a role in constitutive AR activation in PC346Flu1 cells. In contrast, a recent report by Waltering et al., supports the hypothesis of increased sensitivity to residual androgen levels upon 2 to 4 times (LNCaP-ARmo) and 4 to 6 times (LNCaP-ARhi) LNCaP- AR overexpression [38]. Additionally, the authors also analysed the androgen response of these cell lines by expression microarrays. About 2/3 of the AR-regulated genes in our signature were also regulated upon DHT treatment of LNCaP-ARmo and/or LNCaP-ARhi. In particular, this included genes involved in secretory pathways, lipid and sugar metabolism (such as, UGDH, SORD, GLUD1, ELOVL5, ASCL3, UAP1), but also genes implicated in tumor progression and metastasis with functions in cell survival, proliferation and adhesion (EHF, ELL2, TPD52, MAFB, SGK). All together, AR overexpression may lead to different mechanisms of activation, depending on the background of the cells, the type or the duration of the androgen-depletion treatment.

In PC346Flu2 subline, carrying a mutated receptor, transcription of AR-target genes was regulated by both R1881 and OH-flutamide, although the stimulatory effect of the latter was weaker. This is in agreement with the agonistic action of OH-flutamide on the T877A mutated AR in promoting rather than inhibiting the growth of PC34Flu2 cells [8], [39].

In general, from these analyses we can conclude that the AR pathway is modified and still able to respond to stimuli, in the majority of therapy-resistant prostate cancer cells subjected to long-term androgen ablation. Furthermore, it is worth noting how the AR transcription patterns of the three therapy-resistant sublines reflected their respective AR modifications and growth characteristics. AR down-regulation correlated with deficient activation of AR-target genes; high-levels of AR resulted in more differentially-expressed genes and stronger regulation upon R1881 stimulation; finally, the T877A mutated AR responded to both R1881 and hydroxyflutamide.

To investigate the biologic processes coordinated by the AR target genes we used DAVID and Ingenuity tools to extract and cluster Gene Ontology Annotations. Consistent with the physiological roles of androgens in prostate development and maturation, the selected gene-signature is enriched for functions in transcription regulation, intracellular signal transduction, differentiation and regulation of cell proliferation and cell death. Further functions are associated with the metabolism of proteins, lipids and carbohydrates, which can be related to the production and secretion of prostatic fluid. Pathway analysis using Ingenuity showed strong association of the androgen-regulated genes to pathological conditions as cancer, reproductive system, dermatological and cardiovascular diseases (Fig. 3 and Table 8).

Next we evaluated the role of the AR pathway in prostate cancer development and how it is modulated during cancer progression by linking our androgen-regulated gene signature to seven previously published microarray databases on clinical tumor samples. Together, these databases comprise 178 “normal prostate” samples and 331 malignant specimens, including metastasis, recurrent tumors and hormonal therapy-resistant samples (Table 7). It is worth noting that the definition of “normal prostate” is not the same across the different studies. While most authors used benign tissue adjacent to the tumor as the “normal" reference, Yu et al. used normal prostatic epithelia from individuals without evidence of prostatic disease [24]. They showed that the expression profile of prostate cells was not only altered within the tumor itself, but alterations were also detected in apparently benign tissue around the borders of the tumor. This so-called field-effect has been reported in various other studies, and it is believed to be more evident the closer the distance to the tumor [28], [40], [41]. Disparity in the sampling of the “normal prostate” reference may certainly contribute to the variation seen between the diverse studies, together with differences in study design, microarray platforms, and most importantly, in the characteristics of the tumors included.

In summary, our AR-response profiling revealed that a considerable fraction of AR pathway genes were up-regulated in primary prostate cancer compared to normal prostate and down-regulated in metastasis. Further inspection of this gene cluster showed enrichment for genes involved in differentiation and secretory function of the prostate, functions which are redundant, if not detrimental for progressing cancer cells (Fig.4, Cluster 3). On the other hand, the cluster of androgen-regulated genes over-expressed in metastasis is enriched for genes involved in cell survival, proliferation, cytoskeletal remodelling and adhesion, all crucial functions in tumor progression and invasion (Fig. 4, Cluster 4).

It is generally accepted that the AR pathway accounts for the tumor growth in most prostate cancer patients even under hormonal ablation therapy. This hypothesis is supported by numerous reports that the AR itself is expressed in the majority of prostate cancers and often amplified in metastasis and therapy-resistant tumors [42], [43], [44], [45], [46]. Chen et al. have shown that AR overexpression is the most common modification following androgen ablation treatment, and is sufficient to confer hormonal therapy-refractory growth [33]. Furthermore, clinical tumor relapse is determined by PSA recurrence, which may give the impression that the AR pathway has become again fully functional. However, the results of our present study showed a selective down-regulation of AR target genes, questioning the over-simplistic view of the AR pathway as the driving force for prostate cancer growth and proliferation. In fact, the raise in serum PSA levels during relapse rather reflects the expansion of the tumor burden than increased AR activity in the tumor tissue self [47]. Indeed, Sterbis et al. reported that increased risk of biochemical recurrence was associated with low expression of tissue PSA mRNA [48]. Furthermore, the authors observed that serum PSA levels did not correlate with tissue mRNA expression, which was decreased in malignant compared to benign prostate epithelial cells [48]. By using distinct cell lines to establish the androgen-response signature and expanding the patient-derived database sets, our results corroborate previous observations from Hendriksen et al., which used the androgen-response expression profile from LNCaP cells to interrogate a set of prostate cancer xenografts and patient-derived samples [14]. Shortly thereafter, with distinct bioinformatics approaches, two other studies confirmed an attenuated androgen signaling signature in high-grade and metastatic prostate cancer, indicating that down-regulation of the AR pathway, although controversial, is likely to be a true phenomenon [49], [50].

The mechanisms for this selective modulation of the AR pathway during prostate cancer progression are yet undefined, but we speculate that it may be dictated by an imbalance in AR co-regulators and/or interactions with other signaling pathways. Indeed, alterations in several AR co-activators and co-repressors have been previously detected in prostate cancer and, in particular, in hormonal therapy-resistant disease [51], [52]. Furthermore, crosstalk between the AR and other growth factor pathways has been shown to activate AR signaling and selectively regulate a fraction of the AR transcriptional program, in response to IGF and EGF [53], [54].

To accommodate these novel insights into our current knowledge of prostate cancer disease, we propose the following model for the development and progression of prostate tumors (Fig. 6): in the normal prostate the AR maintains prostate homeostasis and secretory functions through a delicate balance between cell survival and differentiation. A yet unknown trigger leads to a switch from androgen-dependent survival to androgen-stimulated cellular proliferation. Recent findings implicate gene fusions between androgen-regulated genes and ETS transcription factor family members in this process. The TMPRSS2-ERG fusion is the most frequent rearrangement, being detected in approximately 50% of the prostate tumors [55]. The androgen-responsive promotor region of the TMPRSS2 gene drives robust expression of ERG, an oncogene that is also frequently involved in chromosomal translocations in Ewing sarcoma, myeloid leukemia and cervical carcinoma [56], [57], [58]. Up to date, multiple other ETS family members and 5′ fusion partners have been identified in related rearrangements in prostate cancer [59], [60], [61], [62]. However, the biological role of ETS fusions in prostate cancer development is still controversial, since ERG and ETV1 by themselves, do not seem to be tumorigenic [60], [63]. Recent evidence suggests that ERG overexpression cooperates with PTEN loss in the progression from PIN to prostate adenocarcinoma [64], [65]. It is worth noting that PC346 cells do not carry the TMPRSS2-ERG or TMPRSS2-ETV1 fusions, nor show increased expression of these oncogenes (unpublished data). Therefore, it remains unclear which mechanism may drive androgen-sensitive growth of PC346C cells. Nevertheless, it is still possible that other less common fusions partners that we did not test yet may be involved. We hypothesize that at early stages, when tumors are well differentiated, expression of prostate-specific genes and genes involved in the production/secretion of prostatic fluid is maintained or even increased due to the growth of the epithelial cell compartment. As tumors progress and become more aggressive, genes involved in prostate differentiation and secretory function are selectively repressed, while genes promoting proliferation are up-regulated. This mechanism will eventually culminate in a fast-growing, poorly-differentiated late-stage disease (Fig. 6). Upon hormone therapy, cells may become resistant and resume growth by adaptations of the AR pathway and/or activation of alternative growth pathways (Fig. 6. Reviewed in [7]). Our cell line model represents two of these AR modifications: AR mutation (PC346Flu2) and AR overexpression (PC346Flu1), as well as AR pathway bypass through activation of oncogenes and tumor suppressor down-regulation (PC346DCC) [31]. However, AR knockdown experiments suggest that the AR pathway may remain vital for most therapy-refractory cells, as it induced apoptosis and inhibited growth of multiple castration-resistant cell lines and xenografts [66], [67], [68], [69], [70], [71].

thumbnail
Figure 6. Proposed model for prostate cancer progression.

In normal prostate epithelial cells the AR maintains the balance between survival, differentiation and proliferation. Cooperation between TMPRSS2:ERG (or related gene fusions) and PTEN loss (of one allele in early stages), is a potential mechanism suggested to drive the transition from prostatic intraepithelial neoplasia (PIN) to prostate adenocarcinoma. These aberrations are early events in prostate cancer development and are present in a large fraction of tumors. Initiation of prostate cancer is marked by a switch from androgen-dependent survival and differentiation to androgen-responsive proliferation. As cancer progresses, the balance is tilted towards tumor growth, while genes involved in prostate differentiation and secretory function are selectively repressed and genes promoting proliferation are up-regulated. In advanced disease, this mechanism eventually culminates in poorly-differentiated fast-growing tumors. Hormonal-therapy is offered to patients with advanced invasive disease, but the tumors will eventually become resistant to androgen ablation/blockade by either adapting or bypassing the AR pathway.

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0023144.g006

In order to identify androgen-regulated genes that could possibly be used in the diagnosis/prognosis of prostate cancer, we selected from our 107-gene signature three androgen-regulated genes: MCCC2, ENDOD1 and ACSL3. Quantitative PCR analysis showed increased MCCC2 expression in early-stage, well-differentiated tumors, while ENDOD1 and ACSL3, were decreased in late-stage tumors and metastasis. In addition, we analyzed immunohistochemical data made available by the Human Protein Atlas, to check the expression of the cognate proteins in tumor samples. The Human Protein Atlas portal is a publicly available database with high-resolution images showing the spatial distribution of proteins in 46 different normal human tissues and 20 different cancer types, as well as 47 different human cell lines (www.proteinatlas.org). Data on ACSL3, MCCC2 and ENDOD1 protein expression is available for 3 normal tissue samples and 11 prostate tumors. Immunohistochemical staining showed moderate to strong cytoplasmic positivity in the glandular prostate cells for all the three potential markers. These results confirm that the candidate genes are indeed translated into proteins that can be detected in the tumor samples, which makes the development of potential diagnostic/prognostic assays feasible. To assess the prognostic value of these genes we compared primary prostate cancer that eventually developed distant metastasis after radical surgery with the non-recurrent tumors, but saw no significant differences (data not shown). Ultimately, the large inter-individual variation resulted in a poor separation between the diverse disease stages, even when the differences in expression were statistically significant. This limits the applicability of MCCC2, ENDOD1 or ACSL3 as independent diagnostic markers, by preventing the setting of an expression cutoff with both high specificity and sensitivity. However, the performance of these candidates may be improved in combination with other disease markers, such as PSA or ETS gene fusions, which has yet to be further evaluated in the diagnosis and prognosis of prostate cancer. Finally, the down-regulation of all three candidate genes in hormonal therapy-resistant compared to hormone-naïve disease is in agreement with an attenuation of the AR pathway, providing important clues on the mechanisms of prostate cancer progression.

In conclusion, the present study showed that castration-resistant PC346 cells maintained a transcriptional response to (anti)androgen stimulation, which was in accordance with the expressed AR modifications. By linking AR modifications with enhanced transcriptional function in therapy-resistant PCa cells, these results corroborate the hypothesis that the AR pathway is adapted and active in most cells refractory to hormonal therapy. The present study also showed that the AR pathway is selectively modulated during PCa progression, leading to repression of genes involved in cellular differentiation and up-regulation of anti-apoptotic and proliferation genes. The AR-responsive gene signature reported here provides a valuable tool to elucidate the mechanisms of this selective adaptation of the AR signalling, as well as to investigate novel disease markers for PCa progression and potential targets for therapy.

Links

Bioconductor [http://www.bioconductor.org]

DAVID Database [http://david.abcc.ncifcrf.gov]

Eisen Lab [http://rama.lbl.gov]

Gene Ontology Omnibus (GEO)[ http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/geo/]

Ingenuity Pathway Analysis [http://www.ingenuity.com/]

Significance Analysis of Microarray Data [http://www-stat.stanford.edu/~tibs/SAM]

The Human Protein Atlas [http://www.proteinatlas.org/]

Supporting Information

Table S1.

List of SAM significant genes for PC346C cell line.

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0023144.s001

(XLS)

Table S2.

List of SAM significant genes for PC346DCC cell line.

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0023144.s002

(XLS)

Table S3.

List of SAM significant genes for PC346Flu1 cell line.

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0023144.s003

(XLS)

Table S4.

List of SAM significant genes for PC346Flu2 cell line.

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0023144.s004

(XLS)

Acknowledgments

We thank Christel Kockx for the technical support with the microarray procedure, Antoine Veldhoven and Don de Lange for providing bioinformatics tools. Further, we would like to acknowledge the pathologists Arno van Leenders and Theo van de Kwast for the histopathological analysis of the patient samples.

Author Contributions

Conceived and designed the experiments: RBM GJ WMvW. Performed the experiments: RBM NFD SE-S. Analyzed the data: RBM. Contributed reagents/materials/analysis tools: WFJvI. Wrote the paper: RBM. Critical discussion of the results and revision of the manuscript: WMvW GJ.

References

  1. 1. Ferlay J, Autier P, Boniol M, Heanue M, Colombet M, et al. (2007) Estimates of the cancer incidence and mortality in Europe in 2006. Ann Oncol 18: 581–592.
  2. 2. Frydenberg M, Stricker PD, Kaye KW (1997) Prostate cancer diagnosis and management. Lancet 349: 1681–1687.
  3. 3. Crawford ED, Eisenberger MA, McLeod DG, Spaulding JT, Benson R, et al. (1989) A controlled trial of leuprolide with and without flutamide in prostatic carcinoma. N Engl J Med 321: 419–424.
  4. 4. Eisenberger MA, Blumenstein BA, Crawford ED, Miller G, McLeod DG, et al. (1998) Bilateral orchiectomy with or without flutamide for metastatic prostate cancer. N Engl J Med 339: 1036–1042.
  5. 5. Prins GS, Sklarew RJ, Pertschuk LP (1998) Image analysis of androgen receptor immunostaining in prostate cancer accurately predicts response to hormonal therapy. J Urol 159: 641–649.
  6. 6. Jenster G (1999) The role of the androgen receptor in the development and progression of prostate cancer. Semin Oncol 26: 407–421.
  7. 7. Devlin HL, Mudryj M (2009) Progression of prostate cancer: multiple pathways to androgen independence. Cancer Lett 274: 177–186.
  8. 8. Marques RB, Erkens-Schulze S, de Ridder CM, Hermans KG, Waltering K, et al. (2005) Androgen receptor modifications in prostate cancer cells upon long-term androgen ablation and antiandrogen treatment. Int J Cancer 117: 221–229.
  9. 9. Baugh LR, Hill AA, Brown EL, Hunter CP (2001) Quantitative analysis of mRNA amplification by in vitro transcription. Nucleic Acids Res 29: E29.
  10. 10. Smyth GK (2005) Limma: linear models for microarray data; Gentleman R, Carey V, Dudoit S, Irizarry R, Huber W, editors. New York: Springer. pp. 397–420.
  11. 11. Smyth GK, Speed T (2003) Normalization of cDNA microarray data. Methods 31: 265–273.
  12. 12. Veldhoven A, de Lange D, Smid M, de Jager V, Kors JA, et al. (2005) Storing, linking, and mining microarray databases using SRS. BMC Bioinformatics 6: 192.
  13. 13. DePrimo SE, Diehn M, Nelson JB, Reiter RE, Matese J, et al. (2002) Transcriptional programs activated by exposure of human prostate cancer cells to androgen. Genome Biol 3: RESEARCH0032.
  14. 14. Hendriksen PJ, Dits NF, Kokame K, Veldhoven A, van Weerden WM, et al. (2006) Evolution of the androgen receptor pathway during progression of prostate cancer. Cancer Res 66: 5012–5020.
  15. 15. Nelson PS, Clegg N, Arnold H, Ferguson C, Bonham M, et al. (2002) The program of androgen-responsive genes in neoplastic prostate epithelium. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 99: 11890–11895.
  16. 16. Nickols NG, Dervan PB (2007) Suppression of androgen receptor-mediated gene expression by a sequence-specific DNA-binding polyamide. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 104: 10418–10423.
  17. 17. Wang Q, Li W, Liu XS, Carroll JS, Janne OA, et al. (2007) A hierarchical network of transcription factors governs androgen receptor-dependent prostate cancer growth. Mol Cell 27: 380–392.
  18. 18. Best CJ, Gillespie JW, Yi Y, Chandramouli GV, Perlmutter MA, et al. (2005) Molecular alterations in primary prostate cancer after androgen ablation therapy. Clin Cancer Res 11: 6823–6834.
  19. 19. Chandran UR, Ma C, Dhir R, Bisceglia M, Lyons-Weiler M, et al. (2007) Gene expression profiles of prostate cancer reveal involvement of multiple molecular pathways in the metastatic process. BMC Cancer 7: 64.
  20. 20. Lapointe J, Li C, Higgins JP, van de Rijn M, Bair E, et al. (2004) Gene expression profiling identifies clinically relevant subtypes of prostate cancer. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 101: 811–816.
  21. 21. Singh D, Febbo PG, Ross K, Jackson DG, Manola J, et al. (2002) Gene expression correlates of clinical prostate cancer behavior. Cancer Cell 1: 203–209.
  22. 22. Tamura K, Furihata M, Tsunoda T, Ashida S, Takata R, et al. (2007) Molecular features of hormone-refractory prostate cancer cells by genome-wide gene expression profiles. Cancer Res 67: 5117–5125.
  23. 23. Varambally S, Yu J, Laxman B, Rhodes DR, Mehra R, et al. (2005) Integrative genomic and proteomic analysis of prostate cancer reveals signatures of metastatic progression. Cancer Cell 8: 393–406.
  24. 24. Yu YP, Landsittel D, Jing L, Nelson J, Ren B, et al. (2004) Gene expression alterations in prostate cancer predicting tumor aggression and preceding development of malignancy. J Clin Oncol 22: 2790–2799.
  25. 25. Dennis G Jr, Sherman BT, Hosack DA, Yang J, Gao W, et al. (2003) DAVID: Database for Annotation, Visualization, and Integrated Discovery. Genome Biol 4: P3.
  26. 26. Huang da W, Sherman BT, Lempicki RA (2009) Systematic and integrative analysis of large gene lists using DAVID bioinformatics resources. Nat Protoc 4: 44–57.
  27. 27. van der Heul-Nieuwenhuijsen L, Dits NF, Jenster G (2009) Gene expression of forkhead transcription factors in the normal and diseased human prostate. BJU Int 103: 1574–1580.
  28. 28. Dhanasekaran SM, Barrette TR, Ghosh D, Shah R, Varambally S, et al. (2001) Delineation of prognostic biomarkers in prostate cancer. Nature 412: 822–826.
  29. 29. Rubin MA, Bismar TA, Andren O, Mucci L, Kim R, et al. (2005) Decreased alpha-methylacyl CoA racemase expression in localized prostate cancer is associated with an increased rate of biochemical recurrence and cancer-specific death. Cancer Epidemiol Biomarkers Prev 14: 1424–1432.
  30. 30. Attard G, Clark J, Ambroisine L, Mills IG, Fisher G, et al. (2008) Heterogeneity and clinical significance of ETV1 translocations in human prostate cancer. Br J Cancer 99: 314–320.
  31. 31. Marques RB, Dits NF, Erkens-Schulze S, van Weerden WM, Jenster GBypass mechanisms of the androgen receptor pathway in therapy-resistant prostate cancer cell models. PLoS One 5:
  32. 32. Tararova ND, Narizhneva N, Krivokrisenko V, Gudkov AV, Gurova KV (2007) Prostate cancer cells tolerate a narrow range of androgen receptor expression and activity. Prostate 67: 1801–1815.
  33. 33. Chen CD, Welsbie DS, Tran C, Baek SH, Chen R, et al. (2004) Molecular determinants of resistance to antiandrogen therapy. Nat Med 10: 33–39.
  34. 34. Culig Z, Hoffmann J, Erdel M, Eder IE, Hobisch A, et al. (1999) Switch from antagonist to agonist of the androgen receptor bicalutamide is associated with prostate tumour progression in a new model system. Br J Cancer 81: 242–251.
  35. 35. Kokontis JM, Hay N, Liao S (1998) Progression of LNCaP prostate tumor cells during androgen deprivation: hormone-independent growth, repression of proliferation by androgen, and role for p27Kip1 in androgen-induced cell cycle arrest. Mol Endocrinol 12: 941–953.
  36. 36. Kokontis J, Takakura K, Hay N, Liao S (1994) Increased androgen receptor activity and altered c-myc expression in prostate cancer cells after long-term androgen deprivation. Cancer Res 54: 1566–1573.
  37. 37. Dehm SM, Tindall DJ (2006) Ligand-independent androgen receptor activity is activation function-2-independent and resistant to antiandrogens in androgen refractory prostate cancer cells. J Biol Chem 281: 27882–27893.
  38. 38. Waltering KK, Helenius MA, Sahu B, Manni V, Linja MJ, et al. (2009) Increased expression of androgen receptor sensitizes prostate cancer cells to low levels of androgens. Cancer Res 69: 8141–8149.
  39. 39. Veldscholte J, Ris-Stalpers C, Kuiper GG, Jenster G, Berrevoets C, et al. (1990) A mutation in the ligand binding domain of the androgen receptor of human LNCaP cells affects steroid binding characteristics and response to anti-androgens. Biochem Biophys Res Commun 173: 534–540.
  40. 40. Chandran UR, Dhir R, Ma C, Michalopoulos G, Becich M, et al. (2005) Differences in gene expression in prostate cancer, normal appearing prostate tissue adjacent to cancer and prostate tissue from cancer free organ donors. BMC Cancer 5: 45.
  41. 41. Waghray A, Schober M, Feroze F, Yao F, Virgin J, et al. (2001) Identification of differentially expressed genes by serial analysis of gene expression in human prostate cancer. Cancer Res 61: 4283–4286.
  42. 42. van der Kwast TH, Schalken J, Ruizeveld de Winter JA, van Vroonhoven CC, Mulder E, et al. (1991) Androgen receptors in endocrine-therapy-resistant human prostate cancer. Int J Cancer 48: 189–193.
  43. 43. Ruizeveld de Winter JA, Janssen PJ, Sleddens HM, Verleun-Mooijman MC, Trapman J, et al. (1994) Androgen receptor status in localized and locally progressive hormone refractory human prostate cancer. Am J Pathol 144: 735–746.
  44. 44. Brown RS, Edwards J, Dogan A, Payne H, Harland SJ, et al. (2002) Amplification of the androgen receptor gene in bone metastases from hormone-refractory prostate cancer. J Pathol 198: 237–244.
  45. 45. Koivisto P, Kononen J, Palmberg C, Tammela T, Hyytinen E, et al. (1997) Androgen receptor gene amplification: a possible molecular mechanism for androgen deprivation therapy failure in prostate cancer. Cancer Res 57: 314–319.
  46. 46. Linja MJ, Savinainen KJ, Saramaki OR, Tammela TL, Vessella RL, et al. (2001) Amplification and overexpression of androgen receptor gene in hormone-refractory prostate cancer. Cancer Res 61: 3550–3555.
  47. 47. Bostwick DG (1994) Prostate-specific antigen. Current role in diagnostic pathology of prostate cancer. Am J Clin Pathol 102: S31–37.
  48. 48. Sterbis JR, Gao C, Furusato B, Chen Y, Shaheduzzaman S, et al. (2008) Higher expression of the androgen-regulated gene PSA/HK3 mRNA in prostate cancer tissues predicts biochemical recurrence-free survival. Clin Cancer Res 14: 758–763.
  49. 49. Tomlins SA, Mehra R, Rhodes DR, Cao X, Wang L, et al. (2007) Integrative molecular concept modeling of prostate cancer progression. Nat Genet 39: 41–51.
  50. 50. Mendiratta P, Mostaghel E, Guinney J, Tewari AK, Porrello A, et al. (2009) Genomic Strategy for Targeting Therapy in Castration-Resistant Prostate Cancer. J Clin Oncol.
  51. 51. Brooke GN, Parker MG, Bevan CL (2008) Mechanisms of androgen receptor activation in advanced prostate cancer: differential co-activator recruitment and gene expression. Oncogene 27: 2941–2950.
  52. 52. Chmelar R, Buchanan G, Need EF, Tilley W, Greenberg NM (2007) Androgen receptor coregulators and their involvement in the development and progression of prostate cancer. Int J Cancer 120: 719–733.
  53. 53. Culig Z, Hobisch A, Cronauer MV, Hittmair A, Radmayr C, et al. (1995) Activation of the androgen receptor by polypeptide growth factors and cellular regulators. World J Urol 13: 285–289.
  54. 54. York TP, Plymate SR, Nelson PS, Eaves LJ, Webb HD, et al. (2005) cDNA microarray analysis identifies genes induced in common by peptide growth factors and androgen in human prostate epithelial cells. Mol Carcinog 44: 242–251.
  55. 55. Tomlins SA, Rhodes DR, Perner S, Dhanasekaran SM, Mehra R, et al. (2005) Recurrent fusion of TMPRSS2 and ETS transcription factor genes in prostate cancer. Science 310: 644–648.
  56. 56. Shimizu K, Ichikawa H, Tojo A, Kaneko Y, Maseki N, et al. (1993) An ets-related gene, ERG, is rearranged in human myeloid leukemia with t(16;21) chromosomal translocation. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 90: 10280–10284.
  57. 57. Ida K, Kobayashi S, Taki T, Hanada R, Bessho F, et al. (1995) EWS-FLI-1 and EWS-ERG chimeric mRNAs in Ewing's sarcoma and primitive neuroectodermal tumor. Int J Cancer 63: 500–504.
  58. 58. Simpson S, Woodworth CD, DiPaolo JA (1997) Altered expression of Erg and Ets-2 transcription factors is associated with genetic changes at 21q22.2-22.3 in immortal and cervical carcinoma cell lines. Oncogene 14: 2149–2157.
  59. 59. Han B, Mehra R, Dhanasekaran SM, Yu J, Menon A, et al. (2008) A fluorescence in situ hybridization screen for E26 transformation-specific aberrations: identification of DDX5-ETV4 fusion protein in prostate cancer. Cancer Res 68: 7629–7637.
  60. 60. Tomlins SA, Laxman B, Dhanasekaran SM, Helgeson BE, Cao X, et al. (2007) Distinct classes of chromosomal rearrangements create oncogenic ETS gene fusions in prostate cancer. Nature 448: 595–599.
  61. 61. Maher CA, Kumar-Sinha C, Cao X, Kalyana-Sundaram S, Han B, et al. (2009) Transcriptome sequencing to detect gene fusions in cancer. Nature 458: 97–101.
  62. 62. Tomlins SA, Bjartell A, Chinnaiyan AM, Jenster G, Nam RK, et al. (2009) ETS gene fusions in prostate cancer: from discovery to daily clinical practice. Eur Urol 56: 275–286.
  63. 63. Tomlins SA, Laxman B, Varambally S, Cao X, Yu J, et al. (2008) Role of the TMPRSS2-ERG gene fusion in prostate cancer. Neoplasia 10: 177–188.
  64. 64. Carver BS, Tran J, Gopalan A, Chen Z, Shaikh S, et al. (2009) Aberrant ERG expression cooperates with loss of PTEN to promote cancer progression in the prostate. Nat Genet 41: 619–624.
  65. 65. King JC, Xu J, Wongvipat J, Hieronymus H, Carver BS, et al. (2009) Cooperativity of TMPRSS2-ERG with PI3-kinase pathway activation in prostate oncogenesis. Nat Genet 41: 524–526.
  66. 66. Compagno D, Merle C, Morin A, Gilbert C, Mathieu JR, et al. (2007) SIRNA-directed in vivo silencing of androgen receptor inhibits the growth of castration-resistant prostate carcinomas. PLoS ONE 2: e1006.
  67. 67. Liao X, Tang S, Thrasher JB, Griebling TL, Li B (2005) Small-interfering RNA-induced androgen receptor silencing leads to apoptotic cell death in prostate cancer. Mol Cancer Ther 4: 505–515.
  68. 68. Haag P, Bektic J, Bartsch G, Klocker H, Eder IE (2005) Androgen receptor down regulation by small interference RNA induces cell growth inhibition in androgen sensitive as well as in androgen independent prostate cancer cells. J Steroid Biochem Mol Biol 96: 251–258.
  69. 69. Cheng H, Snoek R, Ghaidi F, Cox ME, Rennie PS (2006) Short hairpin RNA knockdown of the androgen receptor attenuates ligand-independent activation and delays tumor progression. Cancer Res 66: 10613–10620.
  70. 70. Furutani T, Takeyama K, Koutoku H, Ito S, Taniguchi N, et al. (2005) A role of androgen receptor protein in cell growth of an androgen-independent prostate cancer cell line. Biosci Biotechnol Biochem 69: 2236–2239.
  71. 71. Snoek R, Cheng H, Margiotti K, Wafa LA, Wong CA, et al. (2009) In vivo knockdown of the androgen receptor results in growth inhibition and regression of well-established, castration-resistant prostate tumors. Clin Cancer Res 15: 39–47.