Neutral endopeptidase inhibits prostate cancer tumorigenesis by reducing FGF-2-mediated angiogenesis

A. Horiguchi, D. Y.T. Chen, O. B. Goodman, R. Zheng, R. Shen, H. Guan, L. B. Hersh, D. M. Nanus

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

11 Scopus citations

Abstract

Neutral endopeptidase (NEP) is a cell surface peptidase that catalytically inactivates a variety of physiologically active peptides including basic fibroblast growth factor (FGF-2). We investigated the effect of using lentivirus to overexpress NEP in NEP-deficient DU145 prostate cancer cells. Third-generation lentiviral vectors encoding wild-type NEP (L-NEP), catalytically inactive mutant NEP (L-NEPmu), and green fluorescent protein (L-GFP) were stably introduced into DU145 cells. FGF-2 levels in cell culture supernatants decreased by 80% in L-NEP-infected DU145 cells compared to cells infected with L-NEPmu or L-GFP (P<0.05) while levels of other angiogenic factors were not altered. In vitro tubulogenesis of human vascular endothelial cells induced by conditioned media from DU145 cells infected with L-NEP was significantly reduced compared with that from DU145 cells infected with L-GFP (P<0.05). Tumor xenografts from L-NEP-infected DU145 cells were significantly smaller compared to control cell xenografts and vascularity within these tumors was decreased (P<0.05). Our data suggest that stable expression of NEP in DU145 cells inhibits prostate cancer tumorigenicity by inhibiting angiogenesis, with a probable mechanism being proteolytic inactivation of FGF-2.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)79-87
Number of pages9
JournalProstate Cancer and Prostatic Diseases
Volume11
Issue number1
DOIs
StatePublished - Mar 2008

Bibliographical note

Funding Information:
This work was supported by NIH Grants CA80240 and DOD PC040758, and the Robert H McCooey Memorial Cancer Research Fund to DN and NIH grant DA02243 to LBH and Ferdinand C Valentine Fellowship from New York Academy of Medicine to DYTC.

Funding

This work was supported by NIH Grants CA80240 and DOD PC040758, and the Robert H McCooey Memorial Cancer Research Fund to DN and NIH grant DA02243 to LBH and Ferdinand C Valentine Fellowship from New York Academy of Medicine to DYTC.

FundersFunder number
National Institutes of Health (NIH)CA80240
U.S. Department of DefensePC040758, DA02243
National Institute on Drug AbuseR01DA002243
New York Academy of Medicine

    ASJC Scopus subject areas

    • Oncology
    • Urology
    • Cancer Research

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