Abstract

BackgroundDysregulated expression and splicing of cell adhesion marker CD44 is found in many types of cancer. In prostate cancer (PC) specifically, the standard isoform (CD44s) has been found to be downregulated compared with benign tissue whereas predominant variant isoform CD44v7-10 is upregulated. Mitogen-activated protein kinase pathways and paracrine calcitonin are two common factors linked to dysregulated expression and splicing of CD44 in cancer. Calcitonin has been found to increase proliferation and invasion in PC acting through the protein kinase A pathway.MethodsIn androgen-independent PC with known high CD44v7-10 expression, CD44 total and CD44v7-10 RNA or protein were assessed in response to exogenous and endogenous calcitonin and to inhibitors of protein kinase A, MEK, JNK, or p38 kinase. Benign cells and calcitonin receptor-negative PC cells were also tested.ResultsMEK or p38 but not JNK reduced CD44 total RNA by 40%–65% in cancer and benign cells. Inhibition of protein kinase A reduced CD44 total and v7-10 protein expression. In calcitonin receptor-positive cells only, calcitonin increased CD44 variant RNA and protein by 3 h and persisting to 48 h, apparently dependent on an uninhibited p38 pathway. Cells with constitutive CT expression showed an increase in CD44v7-10 mRNA but a decrease in CD44 total RNA.ConclusionThe MEK pathway increases CD44 RNA, while calcitonin, acting through the protein kinase A and p38 pathway, facilitates variant splicing. These findings could be used in the formulation of therapeutic methods for PC targeting CD44 alternate splicing.

Highlights

  • Dysregulated expression and splicing of cell adhesion marker cell determinant 44 (CD44) is found in many types of cancer

  • By isolating RNA from clinical prostate cancer (PC) specimens, we discovered that the major variant isoform expressed in PC is CD44v7-10

  • We found that the CD44v7-10 isoform makes PC cells preferentially bind to fibronectin rather than hyaluronan; re-expression of CD44s causes the predominant ligand to revert from fibronectin back to hyaluronan[4]

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Summary

Introduction

Dysregulated expression and splicing of cell adhesion marker CD44 is found in many types of cancer. In prostate cancer (PC) the standard isoform (CD44s) has been found to be downregulated compared with benign tissue whereas predominant variant isoform CD44v710 is upregulated. Mitogen-activated protein kinase pathways and paracrine calcitonin are two common factors linked to dysregulated expression and splicing of CD44 in cancer. Calcitonin has been found to increase proliferation and invasion in PC acting through the protein kinase A pathway. The standard (CD44s) isoform is ubiquitous but tissue-specific isoforms may include an assortment of 10 variant (v) exons (CD44v). CD44v are expressed in prostatic secrectory cells while CD44s is found in the whole epithelium. About 30% of cases of prostate cancer (PC) undergo a (page number not for citation purposes)

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