Abstract
From the 33,000 men in the U.S. who die from prostate cancer each year, the majority of these patients exhibit metastatic disease with bone being the most common site of metastasis. Prostate cancer bone metastases are commonly blastic, exhibiting new growth of unhealthy sclerotic bone, which can cause painful skeletal related events. Patient’s current care entails androgen deprivation therapy, anti-resorptive agents, radiation, and chemotherapy to help control the spread of the cancer but little intervention is available to treat blastic bone disease. The transforming growth factor beta (TGFβ) and bone morphogenetic protein (BMP) pathways are known to regulate bone growth and resorption of destructive lytic bone lesions, yet the role of TGFβ/BMP signaling in prostate cancer blastic vs lytic bone lesions are not fully understood. We hypothesized that to target the BMP/TGFβ pathway, a useful biomarker of bone lytic or blastic pathology would have superior response. We show distinct BMP vs. TGFβ signaling in clinical samples of human prostate cancer bone metastases with either lytic or blastic pathologies. BMPs exhibit distinct effects on bone homeostasis, so to examine the effect of BMP inhibition on healthy bone, we treated mice with the BMP receptor small molecule antagonist DMH1 and saw a modest temporary improvement in bone health, with increased trabecular bone. We next sought to use the BMP inhibitor DMH1 to treat bone metastasis engraftment seeded by a caudal artery injection of the lytic human prostate cell line PC3 in immunodeficient mice. The colonization by PC3 cells to the bone were restricted with DMH1 treatment and bone health was importantly preserved. We next proceeded to test BMP inhibition in an injury model of established bone metastasis via intratibial injection of the MYC-CaP mouse prostate cell line into FVBN syngeneic mice. DMH1 treated mice had a modest decrease in trabecular bone and reduced lymphocytes in circulation without affecting tumor growth. Taken together we show unique responses to BMP inhibition in metastatic prostate cancer in the bone. These studies suggest that profiling bone lesions in metastatic prostate cancer can help identify therapeutic targets that not only treat the metastatic tumor but also address the need to better treat the distinct tumor induced bone disease.
Highlights
Tumor induced bone disease (TIBD) continues to present as a high morbidity causation in the progression of many metastatic cancers [1]
To investigate whether canonical readouts of bone morphogenetic protein (BMP) and transforming growth factor b (TGFb) signaling is altered in TIBD we performed Immunohistochemistry (IHC) on clinical samples containing bone with metastatic prostate cancer
Staining for canonical BMP signaling by hosphor-SMAD1/5/9 proteins was surprisingly low in blastic samples (Figure 1A)
Summary
Tumor induced bone disease (TIBD) continues to present as a high morbidity causation in the progression of many metastatic cancers [1]. The consequence of this success is that patients who are living longer are encountering relapse of castrate resistant metastatic prostate cancer (mCRPC) and older age comorbidity factors such as diminished bone health [4]. As prostate cancer transitions from a local disease to one of the bone, care must improve the bone health. Our group recently explored the TIBD phenotypes of mCRPC and found distinct molecular and cellular changes in bone with either osteolytic or sclerotic and osteoblastic manifestations [10]. This has led to the current study to look at the osteogenic factors such as the transforming growth factor b (TGFb) family of molecules, in particular bone morphogenetic proteins (BMPs)
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