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Abstract

Volume 15, Issue 5 (September 2013) 15, 672–678; 10.1038/aja.2013.45

Androgen receptors expressed by prostatic stromal cells obtained from younger versus older males exhibit opposite roles in prostate cancer progression

You-Yi Lu1,*, Bo Jiang1,2,*, Fu-Jun Zhao1, Di Cui1, Qi Jiang1, Jun-Jie Yu1, En-Hui Li1, Xiao-Hai Wang1, Bang-Min Han1 and Shu-Jie Xia1

1Department of Urology, The Affiliated First People's Hospital of Shanghai Jiao Tong University, School of Medicine, Shanghai 200080, China
2Department of Urology, The Qingdao Municipal Hospital, Qingdao 266071, China
*These two authors contributed equally to this work.

Correspondence: Dr SJ Xia, (xsjurologist@163.com); Dr BM Han, (hanbm@163.com)

Received 9 January 2013; Revised 2 February 2013; Accepted 11 March 2013 Advance online publication 24 June 2013

Abstract

Aging is a major risk factor for prostate cancer (PCa), and prostatic stromal cells may also promote PCa progression. Accordingly, stromal cells do not equally promote PCa in older males and younger males. Therefore, it is also possible that the expression of androgen receptors (ARs) by prostatic stromal cells in older versus younger males plays different roles in PCa progression. Using a gene knockdown technique and coculture system, we found that the knockdown of the AR in prostatic stromal cells obtained from younger males could promote the invasiveness and metastasis of cocultured PC3/LNCaP cells in vitro. By contrast, the invasiveness and metastasis of LNCaP cells was inhibited when cocultured with prostatic stromal cells from older males that when AR expression was knocked down. Moreover, after targeting AR expression with small hairpin RNA (shRNA), matrix metalloproteinase (MMP) expression in stromal cells was observed to increase in the younger group, but decreased or remained unchanged in the older group. One exception, however, was observed with MMP9. In vivo, after knocking down AR expression in prostatic stromal cells, the incidence of metastatic lymph nodes was observed to increase in the younger age group, but decreased in the older age group. Together, these data suggest that the AR in prostatic stromal cells played opposite roles in PCa metastasis for older versus younger males. Therefore, collectively, the function of the AR in prostatic stromal cells appears to change with age, and this may account for the increased incidence of PCa in older males.

Keywords: age factors; androgen receptor; human; metastasis; prostate cancer

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Asian Journal of Andrology CN 31-1795/R ISSN 1008-682X  Copyright © 2023  Shanghai Materia Medica, Chinese Academy of Sciences.  All rights reserved.