Hepsin and Maspin are Inversely Expressed in Laser Capture Microdissectioned Prostate Cancer
- 1 April 2003
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wolters Kluwer Health in Journal of Urology
- Vol. 169 (4), 1316-1319
- https://doi.org/10.1097/01.ju.0000050648.40164.0d
Abstract
Recent studies have shown that hepsin, a serine protease, is over expressed in prostate cancers, implicating hepsin activity in tumor invasion. Using microarray technology we have previously identified 22 genes that were up-regulated in high grade prostate cancers compared with benign prostatic hyperplasia. Of them hepsin was the most differentially over expressed. In the current report we compare hepsin to maspin (BD Transduction Laboratories, San Diego, California), a serine protease inhibitor (serpin), to measure the balance between levels of serine proteases and serpins, which are considered to be a critical determinant of net proteolytic activity. We combined the technique of laser capture microdissection with gene expression monitoring by micro-array analysis to investigate the gene expression profiles of prostate cells of different histological types. We also studied maspin immunohistochemically. We observed that hepsin as well as 7 of 22 previously reported up-regulated genes demonstrated a pattern of increasing expression with increasing malignant phenotype. In contrast, the expression of maspin (a serpin) decreased with increasing malignancy of prostate cancers. Using immunohistochemistry we observed that maspin protein is expressed strongly in benign prostatic tissues and slightly in grade 3 prostate cancers, and is absent in grade 4/5 cancers. We conclude that the increased ratio of hepsin-to-maspin may have an important role in prostate cancer progression and invasion.Keywords
This publication has 14 references indexed in Scilit:
- MOLECULAR GENETIC PROFILING OF GLEASON GRADE 4/5 PROSTATE CANCERS COMPARED TO BENIGN PROSTATIC HYPERPLASIAJournal of Urology, 2001
- Gene targeting in hemostasis hepsinFrontiers in Bioscience-Landmark, 2001
- Cancer Statistics, 2001CA: A Cancer Journal for Clinicians, 2001
- A high-density probe array sample preparation method using 10- to 100-fold fewer cellsNature Biotechnology, 1999
- Cancer invasion and tissue remodeling‐cooperation of protease systems and cell typesAPMIS, 1999
- Gene expression profiles of laser-captured adjacent neuronal subtypesNature Medicine, 1999
- ‘Revertant’ DCIS in human axillary breast carcinoma metastasesThe Journal of Pathology, 1997
- A comparison of selected mRNA and protein abundances in human liverElectrophoresis, 1997
- Maspin, a Serpin with Tumor-Suppressing Activity in Human Mammary Epithelial CellsScience, 1994
- Tumor Cell Interactions with the Extracellular Matrix During Invasion and MetastasisAnnual Review of Cell Biology, 1993