Abstract

Recent work with mouse models of prostate cancer (CaP) has shown that inactivation of TGFβ signaling in prostate epithelium can cooperate with deletion of the Pten tumor suppressor to drive locally aggressive cancer and metastatic disease. Here, we show that inactivating the TGFβ pathway by deleting the gene encoding the TGFβ type II receptor (Tgfbr2) in combination with a deletion of the Apc tumor suppressor gene specifically in mouse prostate epithelium, results in the rapid onset of invasive CaP. Micro-metastases were observed in the lymph nodes and lungs of a proportion of the double mutant mice, whereas no metastases were observed in Apc single mutant mice. Prostate-specific Apc;Tgfbr2 mutants had a lower frequency of metastasis and survived significantly longer than Pten;Tgfbr2 double mutants. However, all Apc;Tgfbr2 mutants developed invasive cancer by 30 weeks of age, whereas invasive cancer was rarely observed in Apc single mutant animals, even by one year of age. Further comparison of the Pten and Apc models of CaP revealed additional differences, including adenosquamous carcinoma in the Apc;Tgfbr2 mutants that was not seen in the Pten model, and a lack of robust induction of the TGFβ pathway in Apc null prostate. In addition to causing high-grade prostate intra-epithelial neoplasia (HGPIN), deletion of either Pten or Apc induced senescence in affected prostate ducts, and this restraint was overcome by loss of Tgfbr2. In summary, this work demonstrates that TGFβ signaling restrains the progression of CaP induced by different tumor suppressor mutations, suggesting that TGFβ signaling exerts a general tumor suppressive effect in prostate.

Highlights

  • Prostate cancer (CaP) is one of the leading causes of cancer death in men, with the NCI predicting more than 230,000 cases and 29,000 deaths in the US in 2013

  • Lethal prostate cancer in Apcr/r;Tgfbr2r/r mutants Homozygous deletion of Apc in mouse prostate epithelium results in high-grade prostate intra-epithelial neoplasia (HGPIN) with squamous differentiation in all prostatic lobes, it rarely progresses to locally invasive cancer, and metastases have not been detected [37]

  • TGFb signaling restrains the progression of prostate cancer initiated by loss of the tumor suppressor Pten [33,34]

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Summary

Introduction

Prostate cancer (CaP) is one of the leading causes of cancer death in men, with the NCI predicting more than 230,000 cases and 29,000 deaths in the US in 2013 (www.cancer.gov/ cancertopics/types/prostate). When combined with the Apc mutation, deletion of the Tgfbr2 gene in prostate resulted in progression to invasive cancer, the majority of Apcr/r;Tgfbr2r/r tumors retained the squamous phenotype seen in Apc single nulls (Figure 2).

Results
Conclusion
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