The influence of hypoxia on the prostate cancer proteome

Author:

Ross James A.1,Vissers Johannes P.C.2,Nanda Jyoti13,Stewart Grant D.4,Husi Holger5,Habib Fouad K.13,Hammond Dean E.6,Gethings Lee A.27ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Tissue Injury and Repair Group , University of Edinburgh , Edinburgh , UK

2. Waters Corporation , Wilmslow , UK

3. Prostate Research Group , University of Edinburgh , Edinburgh , UK

4. Department of Surgery , University of Cambridge , Cambridge , UK

5. Institute of Cardiovascular and Medical Sciences , University of Glasgow , Glasgow , UK

6. Department of Cellular and Molecular Physiology , University of Liverpool , Liverpool , UK

7. Manchester Institute of Biotechnology, Division of Infection, Immunity and Respiratory Medicine, Faculty of Biology, Medicine and Health , University of Manchester , Manchester , UK

Abstract

Abstract Prostate cancer accounts for around 15% of male deaths in Western Europe and is the second leading cause of cancer death in men after lung cancer. Mounting evidence suggests that prostate cancer deposits exist within a hypoxic environment and this contributes to radio-resistance thus hampering one of the major therapies for this cancer. Recent reports have shown that nitric oxide (NO) donating non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) reduced tumour hypoxia as well as maintaining a radio-sensitising/therapeutic effect on prostate cancer cells. The aim of this study was to evaluate the impact of hypoxia on the proteome of the prostate and to establish whether NO-NSAID treatment reverted the protein profiles back to their normoxic status. To this end an established hormone insensitive prostate cancer cell line, PC-3, was cultured under hypoxic and normoxic conditions before and following exposure to NO-NSAID in combination with selected other common prostate cancer treatment types. The extracted proteins were analysed by ion mobility-assisted data independent acquisition mass spectrometry (MS), combined with multivariate statistical analyses, to measure hypoxia-induced alterations in the proteome of these cells. The analyses demonstrated that under hypoxic conditions there were well-defined, significantly regulated/differentially expressed proteins primarily involved with structural and binding processes including, for example, TUBB4A, CIRP and PLOD1. Additionally, the exposure of hypoxic cells to NSAID and NO-NSAID agents, resulted in some of these proteins being differentially expressed; for example, both PCNA and HNRNPA1L were down-regulated, corresponding with disruption in the nucleocytoplasmic shuttling process.

Publisher

Walter de Gruyter GmbH

Subject

Biochemistry (medical),Clinical Biochemistry,General Medicine

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