Publication | Open Access
<scp>HOXD13</scp> suppresses prostate cancer metastasis and <scp>BMP4</scp>‐induced epithelial‐mesenchymal transition by inhibiting <scp>SMAD1</scp>
49
Citations
28
References
2021
Year
Prostate Cancer CellsCancer BiologyTumor BiologyCancer Cell BiologyProstate Cancer ProgressionRadiation OncologyMedicineProstatic DiseaseCancer GeneticsCell BiologyTumor MicroenvironmentUrologyCancer GenomicsTumor SuppressorProstate Cancer MetastasisOncologyCancer GrowthCell DevelopmentEpithelial‐mesenchymal Transition
The HOX genes are a group of highly conserved Homeobox-containing genes that control the body plan organization during development. However, their contributions to tumorigenesis and tumor progression remain uncertain and controversial. Here we provided evidence of tumor-suppressive activity of HOXD13 in prostate cancer. HOXD13 depletion contributes to more aggressiveness of prostate cancer cells in vitro and in vivo. These effects were corroborated in a metastatic mice model, where we observed more bone metastatic lesions formed by prostate cancer cells with HOXD13 ablation. Mechanistically, HOXD13 prevents BMP4-induced epithelial-mesenchymal transition (EMT) by inhibiting mothers against decapentaplegic homolog 1 (SMAD1) transcription. Both bioinformation and our tissue microarray cohort data show that HOXD13 expression inversely correlated in advanced prostate cancer patient specimens. Our findings establish HOXD13 as a negative regulator of prostate cancer progression and metastasis by preventing BMP4/SMAD1 signaling, and potentially suggest new strategies for targeting metastatic prostate cancer.
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