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Loss of Ceacam1 promotes prostate cancer progression in Pten haploinsufficient male mice.

Citation
Liu, J., et al. “Loss Of Ceacam1 Promotes Prostate Cancer Progression In Pten Haploinsufficient Male Mice.”. Metabolism: Clinical And Experimental, p. 154215.
Center Yale University
Author Jehnan Liu, Harrison T Muturi, Saja S Khuder, Raghd Abu Helal, Hilda E Ghadieh, Sadeesh K Ramakrishnan, Meenakshi K Kaw, Sumona Ghosh Lester, Ahmed Al-Khudhair, Philip B Conran, Khew-Voon Chin, Cara Gatto-Weis, Sonia M Najjar
Keywords CEACAM1, Fatty acid synthase, neoplasia, Normoinsulinemia, PML, PTEN tumor suppression, Prostate intraepithelial neoplasia
Abstract

OBJECTIVE: PTEN haploinsufficiency plays an important role in prostate cancer development in men. However, monoallelic deletion of Pten gene failed to induce high prostate intraepithelial neoplasia (PIN) until Pten mice aged or fed a high-calorie diet. Because CEACAM1, a cell adhesion molecule with a potential tumor suppression activity, is induced in Pten prostates, the study aimed at examining whether the rise of CEACAM1 limited neoplastic progression in Pten prostates.

METHODS: Pten were crossbred with Cc1 mice harboring a null deletion of Ceacam1 gene to produce Pten/Cc1 double mutants. Prostates from 7-month old male mice were analyzed histologically and biochemically for PIN progression.

RESULTS: Deleting Ceacam1 in Pten mice caused an early development of high-grade PIN in parallel to hyperactivation of PI3 kinase/Akt and Ras/MAP kinase pathways, with an increase in cell proliferation, epithelial-to-mesenchymal transition, angiogenesis and inflammation relative to Pten and Cc1 individual mutants. It also caused a remarkable increase in lipogenesis in prostate despite maintaining insulin sensitivity. Concomitant Ceacam1 deletion with Pten activated the IL-6/STAT3 signaling pathways to suppress Irf-8 transcription that in turn, led to a decrease in the expression level of promyelocytic leukemia gene, a well characterized tumor suppressor in prostate.

CONCLUSIONS: Ceacam1 deletion accelerated high-grade prostate intraepithelial neoplasia in Pten haploinsufficient mice while preserving insulin sensitivity. This demonstrated that the combined loss of Ceacam1 and Pten advanced prostate cancer by increasing lipogenesis and modifying the STAT3-dependent inflammatory microenvironment of prostate.

Year of Publication
2020
Journal
Metabolism: clinical and experimental
Volume
107
Number of Pages
154215
Date Published
12/2020
ISSN Number
1532-8600
DOI
10.1016/j.metabol.2020.154215
Alternate Journal
Metabolism
PMID
32209360
PMCID
PMC7283002
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