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Follicle-stimulating hormone promotes growth of human prostate cancer cell line-derived tumor xenografts.

Olayiwola O OduwoleAriel PoliandriAnthony OkoloPhil RawsonMilena DoroszkoMarcin ChruscielNafis A RahmanGilberto Serrano de AlmeidaCharlotte L BevanWolfgang KoechlingIlpo T Huhtaniemi
Published in: FASEB journal : official publication of the Federation of American Societies for Experimental Biology (2021)
Chemical castration in prostate cancer can be achieved with gonadotropin-releasing hormone (GnRH) agonists or antagonists. Their effects differ by the initial flare of gonadotropin and testosterone secretion with agonists and the immediate pituitary-testicular suppression by antagonists. While both suppress luteinizing hormone (LH) and follicle-stimulating hormone (FSH) initially, a rebound in FSH levels occurs during agonist treatment. This rebound is potentially harmful, taken the expression of FSH receptors (R) in prostate cancer tissue. We herein assessed the role of FSH in promoting the growth of androgen-independent (PC-3, DU145) and androgen-dependent (VCaP) human prostate cancer cell line xenografts in nude mice. Gonadotropins were suppressed with the GnRH antagonist degarelix, and effects of add-back human recombinant FSH were assessed on tumor growth. All tumors expressed GnRHR and FSHR, and degarelix treatment suppressed their growth. FSH supplementation reversed the degarelix-evoked suppression of PC-3 tumors, both in preventive (degarelix and FSH treatment started upon cell inoculation) and therapeutic (treatments initiated 3 weeks after cell inoculation) setting. A less marked, though significant FSH effect occurred in DU145, but not in VCaP xenografts. FSHR expression in the xenografts supports direct FSH stimulation of tumor growth. Testosterone supplementation, to maintain the VCaP xenografts, apparently masked the FSH effect on their growth. Treatment with the LH analogue hCG did not affect PC-3 tumor growth despite their expression of luteinizing hormone/choriongonadotropin receptor. In conclusion, FSH, but not LH, may directly stimulate the growth of androgen-independent prostate cancer, suggesting that persistent FSH suppression upon GnRH antagonist treatment offers a therapeutic advantage over agonist.
Keyphrases
  • prostate cancer
  • radical prostatectomy
  • endothelial cells
  • type diabetes
  • combination therapy
  • single cell
  • adipose tissue
  • stem cells
  • skeletal muscle
  • metabolic syndrome
  • binding protein
  • bone marrow
  • high fat diet induced