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1: World J Urol. 1995;13(6):337-43.Links

Bone morphogenetic protein-6 expression in normal and malignant prostate.

Department of Urology, Vanderbilt University School of Medicine, Nashville, TN 37232, USA.

Bone morphogenetic proteins (BMPs) have multiple biologic functions, including bone formation and embryonic induction. One of these proteins, BMP-6, was reportedly expressed at high levels in human prostate cancers that had also metastasized to bone. This study investigated both BMP-6 mRNA and protein expression in normal and malignant rat and human prostate tissues. BMP-6 was detected in both rat normal prostate and in Dunning rat-prostate adenocarcinoma sublines. The levels of BMP-6 mRNA and protein were similar for normal and malignant rat prostate, regardless of the metastatic potential. Moreover, castration had no apparent effect on BMP-6 production in rat normal ventral prostate, suggesting an androgen-independent gene regulation of this protein. BMP-6 mRNA and protein were also produced by normal and neoplastic human prostate cancer (radical prostatectomy specimens and human carcinoma cell lines DU145 and PC3). BMP-6 mRNA and protein expression, however, was higher in prostate cancer as compared with adjacent normal prostate, with higher-grade tumors (Gleason score of 6 or more) having greater BMP-6 immunostaining than the lower-grade tumors (Gleason score of 4 or less). Taken together, these results suggest that BMP-6 protein expression may serve as a potential marker for prostate cancer but not as a metastatic marker. Moreover, BMP-6 may contribute to prostate neoplastic behavior even in the absence of androgens.

PMID: 9116752 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]