Publication | Open Access
Neurotensin is an autocrine trophic factor stimulated by androgen withdrawal in human prostate cancer.
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Citations
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References
1994
Year
Neurotensin ReceptorHuman Prostate CancerEndocrine OncologyTherapeutic Hormone DeprivationSecrete NeurotensinAutocrine Trophic FactorCell SignalingHormonal ReceptorProstatic DiseaseAndrogen WithdrawalEndocrinologyPharmacologyCell BiologyTumor MicroenvironmentEndocrine-related CancerUrologyNeuropeptide ReceptorMedicineNeuropeptides
After therapeutic hormone deprivation, prostate cancer cells often develop androgen-insensitive growth through mechanisms thus far undefined. Neuropeptides have been previously implicated as growth factors in some prostate cancers. Here, we demonstrate that androgen-sensitive LNCaP human prostate cancer cells produce and secrete neurotensin following androgen withdrawal. We show that while LNCaP cells express the neurotensin receptor, only androgen-deprived cells exhibit a growth response to exogenous neurotensin. We further demonstrate that androgen-stimulated cells may be refractory to exogenous neurotensin due to androgen induction of a metalloprotease active toward neurotensin. Thus, prostate cancer cells deprived of androgen develop an alternative autocrine growth mechanism involving neurotensin.
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