Thromb Haemost 2005; 93(05): 964-975
DOI: 10.1160/TH04-09-0637
Cellular Proteolysis and Oncology
Schattauer GmbH

Epidermal growth factor modulates prostate cancer cell invasiveness regulating urokinase-type plasminogen activator activity

EGF-receptor inhibition may prevent tumor cell dissemination
Claudio Festuccia
1   Departments of Experimental Medicine
,
Adriano Angelucci
2   Surgery, L’Aquila, Italy
,
Giovanni Luca Gravina
2   Surgery, L’Aquila, Italy
,
Leda Biordi
1   Departments of Experimental Medicine
,
Danilo Millimaggi
1   Departments of Experimental Medicine
,
Paola Muzi
1   Departments of Experimental Medicine
,
Carlo Vicentini
2   Surgery, L’Aquila, Italy
,
Mauro Bologna
1   Departments of Experimental Medicine
3   Basic and Applied Biology University of L’Aquila, L’Aquila, Italy
› Author Affiliations

Partly presented at the Second Chianti Meeting on Proteases held in Tuscany, Italy, from May 16–20, 2004
Further Information

Publication History

Received 30 September 2004

Accepted after resubmission 23 February 2005

Publication Date:
11 December 2017 (online)

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Summary

Urokinase-type plasminogen activator receptor (uPAR) and Epidermal Growth Factor Receptor (EGFR) are ubiquitous receptors involved in the control of a variety of cellular processes frequently found altered in cancer cells. The EGFR has been recently described to play a transduction role of uPAR stimuli, mediating uPA-induced proliferation in highly malignant cells that overexpress uPAR. We compared the uPA production, the presence of uPAR, AR, EGFR and Her2 with the chemotaxis and the Matrigel invasion in ten human PCa cell lines and observed that: (1) the levels of Her2, but not of EGFR, as well as the uPA secretion, cell motility and Matrigel invasion were statistically higher in AR negative than in AR positive PCa cells; (2) the uPA secretion and uPAR expression were positively related to Matri-gel invasion; (3) the EGF was able to stimulate chemotaxis and Matrigel invasion in a dose-dependent manner; (4) the EGF-induced cell migration was statistically higher in AR negative than in AR positive cells with a similar increase with respect to basal value (about 2.6 fold); (5) the Matrigel invasion was statistically higher in AR negative than in AR positive PCa cells also if the increment of Matrigel invasion after EGF treatment was statis- tically higher in AR positive respect to AR negative cells; (6) the EGF induced uPA secretion and its membrane uptake through the increment of uPAR; and (7) these effects were blocked by EGFR/Her2 tyrosine kinase inhibitors with IC50 lower than those needed to inhibit cell proliferation and required PI3K/Akt, MAPK and PI-PLC activities as verified by inhibition experiments. These enzymatic activities were regulated in different manners in PTEN positive and negative cells. In fact, the inhibition of PI3K blocked the EGF-induced invasiveness in PTEN positive cells but not in PTEN negative cells, in which PI3K activity was not influenced by EGFR/Her2 activation, whereas the inhibition of MAPK was able to block the invasive phenomena in both cell types. Taken together, our data suggest that the blockade of EGFR could attenuate the invasive potential of PCa cells. In addition, considering that the EGFR expression is related to higher Gleason grade of PCa and that EGFR levels are increased after anti androgenic therapy, this therapeutic approach could slow down the metastasis formation which represents the most dramatic event of PCa progression.