Abstract

We have previously shown that human prostate cancer cells are capable of acquiring malignant attributes through interaction with stromal cells in the tumor microenvironment, while the interacting stromal cells can also become affected with both phenotypic and genotypic alterations. This study used a co-culture model to investigate the mechanism underlying the co-evolution of cancer and stromal cells. Red fluorescent androgen-dependent LNCaP prostate cancer cells were cultured with a matched pair of normal and cancer-associated prostate myofibroblast cells to simulate cancer-stromal interaction, and cellular changes in the co-culture were documented by tracking the red fluorescence. We found frequent spontaneous fusions between cancer and stromal cells throughout the co-culture. In colony formation assays assessing the fate of the hybrid cells, most of the cancer-stromal fusion hybrids remained growth-arrested and eventually perished. However, some of the hybrids survived to form colonies from the co-culture with cancer-associated stromal cells. These derivative clones showed genomic alterations together with androgen-independent phenotype. The results from this study reveal that prostate cancer cells are fusogenic, and cancer-stromal interaction can lead to spontaneous fusion between the two cell types. While a cancer-stromal fusion strategy may allow the stromal compartment to annihilate invading cancer cells, certain cancer-stromal hybrids with increased survival capability may escape annihilation to form a derivative cancer cell population with an altered genotype and increased malignancy. Cancer-stromal fusion thus lays a foundation for an incessant co-evolution between cancer and the cancer-associated stromal cells in the tumor microenvironment.

Highlights

  • Prostate cancer treatment is frequently set back by androgenindependent progression and bone metastasis

  • The myofibroblast stromal cells could rescue LNCaP cells from androgen starvationinduced death [11], while 3-dimensional co-culture resulted in constitutive expressional changes in both the cancer and the stromal cells [12,13], reflecting the co-evolution between cancer and mesenchymal stromal cells observed in prostate cancer progression and bone metastasis

  • Investigation into the direct contact between cancer and stromal cells may unveil the mechanism by which cancer-stromal interaction promotes prostate cancer progression and bone metastasis

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Summary

Introduction

Prostate cancer treatment is frequently set back by androgenindependent progression and bone metastasis. LNCaP human prostate cancer cells, for instance, are androgen-dependent when assayed for tumor formation in castrated male athymic mice These cells, could form frequent tumors when co-inoculated with cells of the bone marrow mesenchymal stromal lineage [9,10]. The myofibroblast stromal cells could rescue LNCaP cells from androgen starvationinduced death [11], while 3-dimensional co-culture resulted in constitutive expressional changes in both the cancer and the stromal cells [12,13], reflecting the co-evolution between cancer and mesenchymal stromal cells observed in prostate cancer progression and bone metastasis. Investigation into the direct contact between cancer and stromal cells may unveil the mechanism by which cancer-stromal interaction promotes prostate cancer progression and bone metastasis. Cancer-stromal cell fusion is a contributing mechanism for androgenindependent prostate cancer progression

Methods
Results
Androgen independence of the derivative clones from cancer-stromal fusion
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