Abstract

Notch signaling is associated with prostate osteoblastic bone metastases and calcium/calmodulin-dependent kinase II (CaMKII) is associated with osteoblastogenesis of human mesenchymal stem cells. Here we show that prostate cancer cell lines C4-2B and PC3, both derived from bone metastases and express Notch-1, have all four isoforms of CaMKII (alpha, beta, gamma, delta). In contrast, prostate cancer cell lines LNcaP and DU145, which are not derived from bone metastases and lack the Notch-1 receptor, both lack the alpha isoform of CaMKII. In addition, DU145 cells also lack the beta-isoform. In C4-2B cells, inhibition of CaMKII by KN93 or gamma-secretase by L-685,458 inhibited the formation of the cleaved form of Notch-1 thus inhibiting Notch signaling. KN93 inhibited down stream Notch-1 signaling including Hes-1 gene expression, Hes-1 promoter activity, and c-Myc expression. In addition, both KN93 and L-685,458 inhibited proliferation and Matrigel invasion by C4-2B cells. The activity of gamma-secretase was unaffected by KN93 but markedly inhibited by L-685,458. Inhibition of the expression of alpha, beta, or gamma-isoform by siRNA did not affect Hes-1 gene expression, however when expression of one isoform was inhibited by siRNA, there were compensatory changes in the expression of the other isoforms. Over-expression of CaMKII-alpha increased Hes-1 expression, consistent with Notch-1 signaling being at least partially dependent upon CaMKII. This unique crosstalk between CaMKII and Notch-1 pathways provides new insight into Notch signaling and potentially provides new targets for pharmacotherapeutics.

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