Abstract

The tumor microenvironment significantly influences prostate cancer progression. Androgen receptor exerts its effect through downstream target genes to regulate prostate cancer cell proliferation. The c-FLIP gene was recently shown to be an androgen receptor target gene. c-FLIP is an inactive homologue of caspase-8 and, thus, it inhibits the death receptor mediated apoptosis pathway. c-FLIP over expression was shown to accelerate the progression of prostate cancer cells to androgen independence. We evaluated the role of c-FLIP expression in stromal cells in prostate cancer development. We examined c-FLIP expression in 53 androgen dependent and 21 androgen independent prostate cancer stromal cells by immunohistochemical analysis. The effects of c-FLIP over expression in stromal cells on the growth and invasion of LNCaP and PC3 prostate cancer cells were determined in indirect coculture systems. At the androgen dependent stage the stromal c-FLIP level was increased in prostate cancer tissue. The expression level of stromal c-FLIP was associated with tumor differentiation. However, stromal c-FLIP expression was not increased in androgen independent human prostate cancer. c-FLIP over expression in stromal cells stimulated the growth and invasion of prostate cancer, including LNCaP and PC3 cells in vitro. These results indicate the over expression of stromal c-FLIP and its function for promoting prostate cancer growth and invasion.

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