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Osteoblast-derived extracellular vesicles exert osteoblastic and tumor-suppressive functions via SERPINA3 and LCN2 in prostate cancer.

Kagenori ItoTomofumi YamamotoYusuke HayashiShun SatoJun NakayamaFumihiko UrabeTakeo ShimasakiEijiro NakamuraYoshiyuki MatuiHiroyuki FujimotoTakahiro KimuraShin EgawaTakahiro OchiyaYusuke Yamamoto
Published in: Molecular oncology (2023)
Clinically, the osteolytic phenotype is rare in prostate cancer (PCa), and the prognosis is generally worse than that of the osteoblastic phenotype. Osteoblastic prostate cancer (BPCa) is a major type of bone metastasis. Several factors responsible for osteogenesis have been identified, but the molecular mechanism of osteoblastic bone metastasis in PCa is not fully understood. Here, we show the osteogenic and tumor-suppressive roles of SERPINA3 and LCN2 in BPCa. In a co-culture of osteoblasts (OBs) and BPCa cells, SERPINA3 and LCN2 were remarkably upregulated in BPCa via OB-derived extracellular vesicles (EVs), while they were not in the co-culture of OBs and osteolytic prostate cancer (LPCa) cells. In both the co-culture system and mouse xenograft experiments with intracaudal injection, enhanced expression of SERPINA3 and LCN2 in PCa led to osteogenesis. Additionally, the addition of SERPINA3 and LCN2 to BPCa cells significantly suppressed the proliferative potential. Retrospective analysis also confirmed that high expression levels of SERPINA3 and LCN2 were significantly correlated with a better prognosis. Our results may partially explain how osteoblastic bone metastasis develops and why the prognosis for BPCa is relatively better than that for LPCa.
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