Prostate cancer and benign tumors of the prostate are the two most common neoplastic diseases in men in the United States, however, research on their causes and treatment has been slow because of the difficulty in obtaining fresh samples of human tissue and a lack of well characterized cell lines which exhibit growth and differentiation characteristics of normal prostatic epithelium. Non-neoplastic adult human prostatic epithelial cells from a white male donor were immortalized with human papillomavirus 18 which resulted in the establishment of the RWPE-1 cell line. Cells from the RWPE-1 cell line were further transformed by v-Ki-ras to establish the RWPE-2 cell line. The objectives of this study were to: (1) establish the prostatic epithelial origin and androgen responsiveness of RWPE-1 and RWPE-2 cell lines; (2) examine their response to growth factors; and (3) establish the malignant characteristics of the RWPE-2 cell line. Immunoperoxidase staining showed that both RWPE-1 and RWPE-2 cells express cytokeratins 8 and 18, which are characteristic of luminal prostatic epithelial cells, but they also coexpress basal cell cytokeratins. These cell lines show growth stimulation and prostate specific antigen (PSA) and androgen receptor (AR) expression in response to the synthetic androgen mibolerone, which establishes their prostatic epithelial origin. Both cell lines also show a dose-dependent growth stimulation by EGF and bFGF and growth inhibition when exposed to TGF-beta, however, the transformed RWPE-2 cells are less responsive. RWPE-1 cells neither grow in agar nor form tumors when injected into nude mice with or without Matrigel. However, RWPE-2 cells form colonies in agar and tumors in nude mice. In the in vitro invasion assay, RWPE-1 cells are not invasive whereas RWPE-2 cells are invasive. Nuclear expression of p53 and Rb proteins was heterogeneous but detectable by immunostaining in both cell lines. The RWPE-1 cells, which show many normal cell characteristics, and the malignant RWPE-2 cells, provide useful cell culture models for studies on prostate growth regulation and carcinogenesis.
This study demonstrates that altered patterns of Rb protein expression may be an important prognostic variable in patients presenting with invasive bladder cancer.
We report the outcome of 61 patients with superficial bladder tumors who received bacillus Calmette-Guerin (BCG) therapy and were followed for at least 10 years (range 10 to 13 years). A total of 19 patients (31%) remains free of tumor and progression, 17 (28%) had interval superficial recurrences but no progression and 25 (41%) had progression, first identified as muscle invasion in 12, prostatic involvement in 8 or metastasis in 5. Most tumors recurred or progressed within the first 5 years. Of the 61 patients 33 (54%) are disease-free and with an intact bladder, 13 (21%) are alive after cystectomy, 2 (3%) died of other causes, 1 (2%) is alive with metastasis and 12 (20%) died of metastatic urothelial cancer (11 from the bladder or prostate and 1 from an upper tract tumor).
Progress in prostate cancer research has been hindered by the lack of well characterized, immortalized, human prostatic epithelial cell lines that express markers of normal prostatic epithelial cells and mimic normal growth and differentiation responses to androgens. The objectives of this study were to: (i) establish immortalized cell lines from non-neoplastic, adult human prostatic epithelium using adenovirus-12/simian virus-40 (Ad12-SV40) hybrid virus; (ii) establish their prostatic epithelial origin; (iii) demonstrate androgen responsiveness; and (iv) examine response to growth factors. Primary epithelial cell cultures derived from a non-neoplastic, adult human prostate were infected with the Ad12-SV40 virus. Several immortalized clones were isolated. Single cell cloning of one clone, free of cytopathic effects, gave rise to the PWr-1E cell line. An immortalized cell line PWR-1E, which expresses many characteristics of normal prostatic epithelial cells was established. Immunostaining showed that cells express cytokeratins 8 and 18 normally expressed by differentiated, secretory prostatic epithelial cells. The most remarkable characteristics of PWR-1E cells are growth stimulation, increased expression of androgen receptor and induction of prostate specific antigen (PSA) expression in response to androgens, which indisputably establish their prostatic epithelial origin. They are positive for SV40 large-T antigen and show strong nuclear staining for p53. Cells from passages 23 and 40 were not tumorigenic in nude mice even when co-injected with Matrigel. They grow in a serum-free defined medium and respond to EGF, bFGF and TGF-beta. Passage 42-cells showed a human male (XY), hyperdiploid karyotype. The PWR-1E cell line is the only known Ad12-SV40-immortalized human prostatic epithelial cell line. PWR-1E cells can be used to study (i) the etiology and the multistep process of carcinogenesis and tumor progression in the human prostate; (ii) normal prostate physiology and differentiation; and (iii) potential prostate cancer chemopreventive agents.
HER-2/neu overexpression appears to play a role in determining the malignant potential of some human cancers. To date, no urothelial malignancies appear to have been evaluated for HER-2/neu DNA amplification, mRNA expression and protein overproduction. By Southern hybridization we detected DNA amplification and a possible structural rearrangement of the HER-2/neu oncogene in one of 12 bladder tumors. A 14 kb DNA fragment in addition to the expected 12.5 Kb fragment was found. Additionally, the HER-2/neu oncogene was amplified sixfold in the tumor compared to placental DNA. Five of 14 (36%) bladder tumors overexpressed HER-2/neu mRNA three to 38-fold compared to normal urothelium. HER-2/neu overexpression occurred in superficial and invasive tumors. Immunohistochemical analysis was performed on the one tumor with DNA amplification and the 14 tumors evaluated for mRNA expression. The tumor with DNA amplification and three of the five tumors with HER-2/neu mRNA overexpression stained positively for the p185HER-2/neu protein. These findings suggest that DNA amplification occurs infrequently in bladder cancer. Thirty-six percent of bladder cancers overexpress HER-2/neu mRNA. Immunohistochemical analysis with a p185HER-2/neu polyclonal antibody, on formalin fixed, paraffin embedded tissue, was specific for HER-2/neu overexpression but not as sensitive as Northern analysis.
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