Nuclear androgen receptors in benign and malignant human prostatic tumors were estimated with a nuclear exchange assay to evaluate the applicability of the assay to biopsy size tissue samples. The mean nuclear androgen receptor content of six different prostate samples was not dependent on the amount of tissue used. In contrast, however, there was no significant correlation between the results obtained for individual prostates when large samples (500 mg) and samples weighing 100, 50(r = 0.38, n = 14), and 25 mg were compared. This lack of correlation could not be attributed to variations in the assay nor to differences in the percentage of epithelium in the samples. There was no effect of the presence of molybdate on the estimated nuclear androgen receptor level. We concluded that androgen receptors are distributed nonhomogeneously over prostatic tissue and that androgen receptor assays on multiple biopsies are required to obtain a proper estimate of the true androgen receptor content of the tissue.
SummaryAge is an important factor in the development and spread of breast cancer. Stromal cells also contribute to breast cancer growth and metastasis through the production of extracellular matrix (ECM) modifiers such as urokinase type plasminogen activator (uPA), its receptor (uPAR), its inhibitors (PAI-1 and PAI-2), matrix metalloproteinases (MMPs), and growth factors, including the fibroblast and insulin-like growth factors (FGF’s and IGF’s). In the present study we have investigated whether breast fibroblasts aged in vitro through passage in culture display altered levels of the plasminogen activator system and growth factors that are known to modulate that system.With real-time RT-PCR we found that during passage human breast fibroblasts, whether derived from the tumour burden or from matched adjacent normal breast tissue, exhibited a consistent increase in PAI-1 and FGF-1 and a decrease in MMP-2 mRNA expression. In addition, in 5 out of 7 fibroblast strains we observed an induction of uPA expression in combination with a reduced IGF-1 expression. Interestingly, while during aging MMP-2 protein increased in all tumour-derived fibroblast strains, these protein levels were reduced in all normal-tissue-derived fibroblasts. No other clear-cut age-dependent alterations were found in the all-together 25 factors investigated. We furthermore demonstrate in one tumour-derived fibroblast strain that the increases in uPA and PAI-1 mRNA and MMP-2 protein production are inversely related to the telomere length. Artificially increasing telomere length in this fibroblast strain by expressing human telomerase reverse transcriptase (hTERT) prevented senescence and resulted in late passage cultures with early passage uPA, PAI-1 and MMP-2 levels.Our results show that aging accompanied by telomere loss induces PAI-1 and FGF-1 mRNA expression in all breast fibroblast strains, increases uPA and decreases IGF-1 mRNA expression in a subset, and increases MMP-2 protein expression only in tumour-derived breast fibroblasts. These age-induced levels of PAI-1, FGF-1, uPA and MMP-2 in stromal breast fibroblast could contribute to breast cancer progression.
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