Characterization of Intracellular Prostate-specific Antigen from Laser Capture Microdissected Benign and Malignant Prostatic Epithelium
The proportion of unbound serum prostate-specific antigen (PSA; percent-free PSA) is reported to be lower in men with prostate cancer compared to men with benign prostates (U. H. Stenman et al. , Cancer Res., 51: 222–226, 1991; H. Lilja et al. , Clin. Chem., 37: 1618–1625, 1991; D. L. Woodrum et al....
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Veröffentlicht in: | Clinical cancer research 2000-02, Vol.6 (2), p.353-356 |
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Zusammenfassung: | The proportion of
unbound serum prostate-specific antigen (PSA; percent-free PSA) is
reported to be lower in men with prostate cancer compared to men with
benign prostates (U. H. Stenman et al. , Cancer Res.,
51: 222–226, 1991; H. Lilja et
al. , Clin. Chem., 37: 1618–1625, 1991; D. L.
Woodrum et al. , J. Urol., 159: 5–12,
1998; W. J. Catalona et al. , J. Am. Med. Assoc.,
279: 1542–1547, 1998). The majority of
immunoreactive PSA in serum is complexed to α-1-antichymotrypsin
(ACT). Two major mechanistic questions have previously been unknown:
( a ) Does PSA in human prostate cancer cells in tissue
exist in a free or bound form? and ( b ) Is PSA produced
by malignant cells in the free form because it has lost the ability to
form a complex with ACT? Laser capture microdissection (LCM) enables
the acquisition of pure populations of defined cell types from tissue
(M. R. Emmert-Buck et al. , Science,
274: 998-1001, 1996; R. F. Bonner et
al. , Science, 278: 1481–1483, 1997). This
technology provides a unique opportunity to study intracellular protein
composition and structure from human cells. In this study, we used LCM
to assess the bound versus free form of intracellular
PSA in both benign and malignant epithelium procured from prostate
tissue.
One-dimensional and two-dimensional PAGE were performed on cellular
lysates from LCM-procured benign and malignant prostate epithelium from
frozen tissue specimens. Western blotting analysis of one-dimensional
PAGE gels revealed a strong band at M r
30,000 (expected molecular weight of unbound PSA) in all cases
demonstrating that the vast majority of intracellular tumor and normal
PSA exists within cells in the “free” form. Binding studies showed
that PSA recovered from LCM-procured cells retained the full ability to
bind ACT, and two-dimensional PAGE Western analysis demonstrated that
the PSA/ACT complex was stable under strong reducing conditions. We
conclude that intracellular PSA exists in the “free” form and that
binding to ACT occurs exclusively outside of the cell. |
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ISSN: | 1078-0432 1557-3265 |