Abstract

PRH/HHEX (proline-rich homeodomain protein/haematopoietically expressed homeobox protein) is a transcription factor that controls cell proliferation, cell differentiation and cell migration. Our previous work has shown that in haematopoietic cells, Protein Kinase CK2-dependent phosphorylation of PRH results in the inhibition of PRH DNA-binding activity, increased cleavage of PRH by the proteasome and the misregulation of PRH target genes. Here we show that PRH and hyper-phosphorylated PRH are present in normal prostate epithelial cells, and that hyper-phosphorylated PRH levels are elevated in benign prostatic hyperplasia, prostatic adenocarcinoma, and prostate cancer cell lines. A reduction in PRH protein levels increases the motility of normal prostate epithelial cells and conversely, PRH over-expression inhibits prostate cancer cell migration and blocks the ability of these cells to invade an extracellular matrix. We show that CK2 over-expression blocks the repression of prostate cancer cell migration and invasion by PRH. In addition, we show that PRH knockdown in normal immortalised prostate cells results in an increase in the population of cells capable of colony formation in Matrigel, as well as increased cell invasion and decreased E-cadherin expression. Inhibition of CK2 reduces PRH phosphorylation and reduces prostate cell proliferation but the effects of CK2 inhibition on cell proliferation are abrogated in PRH knockdown cells. These data suggest that the increased phosphorylation of PRH in prostate cancer cells increases both cell proliferation and tumour cell migration/invasion.

Highlights

  • The transcription factor PRH/HHEX is required during embryogenesis for the development of several organs including the heart, thyroid, pancreas and haematopoietic compartment

  • We show that PRH is hyper-phosphorylated in benign prostatic hyperplasia (BPH), prostatic adenocarcinoma and prostate cancer cell lines and that PRH phosphorylation in prostate cells is dependent on CK2 activity

  • We previously produced conformation-specific antibodies that recognise preferentially either hypophosphorylated PRH or hyper-phosphorylated PRH and we used these antibodies to show that the inhibition of CK2 in leukaemic cells with specific inhibitors leads to loss of detection of pPRH.[13]

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Summary

Introduction

The transcription factor PRH/HHEX (proline-rich homeodomain protein/haematopoietically expressed homeobox protein) is required during embryogenesis for the development of several organs including the heart, thyroid, pancreas and haematopoietic compartment (reviewed by Soufi and Jayaraman[1]). We showed previously that PRH over-expression inhibits the migration of normal immortalised prostate PNT2-C2 cells and prostate cancer cells and significantly reduces the ability of DU145

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Conclusion

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