Abstract

To identify pathways controlling prostate cancer metastasis we performed differential display analysis of the human prostate carcinoma cell line PC-3 and its highly metastatic derivative PC-3M. This revealed that a 78-kDa interferon-inducible GTPase, MxA, was expressed in PC-3 but not in PC-3M cells. The gene encoding MxA, MX1, is located in the region of chromosome 21 deleted as a consequence of fusion of TMPRSS2 and ERG, which has been associated with aggressive, invasive prostate cancer. Stable exogenous MxA expression inhibited in vitro motility and invasiveness of PC-3M cells. In vivo exogenous MxA expression decreased the number of hepatic metastases following intrasplenic injection. Exogenous MxA also reduced motility and invasiveness of highly metastatic LOX melanoma cells. A mutation in MxA that inactivated its GTPase reversed inhibition of motility and invasion in both tumor cell lines. Co-immunoprecipitation studies demonstrated that MxA associated with tubulin, but the GTPase-inactivating mutation blocked this association. Because MxA is a highly inducible gene, an MxA-targeted drug discovery screen was initiated by placing the MxA promoter upstream of a luciferase reporter. Examination of the NCI diversity set of small molecules revealed three hits that activated the promoter. In PC-3M cells, these drugs induced MxA protein and inhibited motility. These data demonstrate that MxA inhibits tumor cell motility and invasion, and that MxA expression can be induced by small molecules, potentially offering a new approach to the prevention and treatment of metastasis.

Highlights

  • Increased understanding of the mechanisms regulating metastasis offers the potential of designing targeted drugs aimed at preventing neoplastic spread

  • This study demonstrated differential expression of a DD-RTPCR band (DD-2) that was found in the PC-3 parental cell line and not in PC-3M cells (Fig. 1B)

  • We used the DD-2 probe to screen a cDNA library generated from PC-3 mRNA, and we obtained a 2.0-kb cDNA clone that contained ϳ70% of the expected 3.0-kb sequence of MxA [16]

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Summary

Introduction

Increased understanding of the mechanisms regulating metastasis offers the potential of designing targeted drugs aimed at preventing neoplastic spread. The three small molecules that induced an increase in activity of Ͼ2.2-fold were screened for their effect on MxA protein expression and on PC-3M motility, as described above.

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