Bicalutamide-induced hypoxia potentiates RUNX2-mediated Bcl-2 expression resulting in apoptosis resistance.

G Browne, H Nesbitt, L Ming, GS Stein, JB Lian, SR McKeown, Jenny Worthington

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    Abstract

    Background: We have previously shown that hypoxia selects for more invasive, apoptosis-resistant LNCaP prostate cancer cells, with up-regulation of the osteogenic transcription factor RUNX2 and the anti-apoptotic factor Bcl-2 detected in the hypoxia-selected cells. Following this observation we questioned through what biological mechanism this occurs. Methods: We examined the effect of hypoxia on RUNX2 expression and the role of RUNX2 in the regulation of Bcl-2 and apoptosis resistance in prostate cancer. Results: Hypoxia increased RUNX2 expression in vitro and bicalutamide-treated LNCaP tumours in mice (previously shown to have increased tumour hypoxia) exhibited increased RUNX2 expression. Additionally, RUNX2 over-expressing LNCaP cells showed increased cell viability following bicalutamide and docetaxel treatment which was inhibited by RUNX2 siRNA; a range of assays demonstrated that this was due to resistance to apoptosis. RUNX2 expression was associated with increased Bcl-2 levels, and regulation of Bcl-2 by RUNX2 was confirmed through ChIP binding and reporter assays. Moreover, a Q-PCR array identified other apoptosis-associated genes up-regulated in the RUNX2 over-expressing LNCaP cells. Conclusion: This study establishes a contributing mechanism for progression of prostate cancer cells to a more apoptosis-resistant and thus malignant phenotype, whereby increased expression of RUNX2 modulates the expression of apoptosis-associated factors, specifically Bcl-2.
    Original languageEnglish
    Pages (from-to)1714-1721
    JournalBRITISH JOURNAL OF CANCER
    Volume107
    DOIs
    Publication statusPublished (in print/issue) - 2012

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