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Inhibition of glypican-1 expression induces an activated fibroblast phenotype in a human bone marrow-derived stromal cell-line.

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TLDR
In this article, the significance of glypican-1 (GPC-1), a heparan sulfate proteoglycan, in regulating the activation of human bone marrow-derived stromal cells of fibroblast lineage (HS-5) was elucidated.
Abstract
Cancer-associated fibroblasts (CAFs) are the most abundant stromal cell type in the tumor microenvironment. CAFs orchestrate tumor-stromal interactions, and contribute to cancer cell growth, metastasis, extracellular matrix (ECM) remodeling, angiogenesis, immunomodulation, and chemoresistance. However, CAFs have not been successfully targeted for the treatment of cancer. The current study elucidates the significance of glypican-1 (GPC-1), a heparan sulfate proteoglycan, in regulating the activation of human bone marrow-derived stromal cells (BSCs) of fibroblast lineage (HS-5). GPC-1 inhibition changed HS-5 cellular and nuclear morphology, and increased cell migration and contractility. GPC-1 inhibition also increased pro-inflammatory signaling and CAF marker expression. GPC-1 induced an activated fibroblast phenotype when HS-5 cells were exposed to prostate cancer cell conditioned media (CCM). Further, treatment of human bone-derived prostate cancer cells (PC-3) with CCM from HS-5 cells exhibiting GPC-1 loss increased prostate cancer cell aggressiveness. Finally, GPC-1 was expressed in mouse tibia bone cells and present during bone loss induced by mouse prostate cancer cells in a murine prostate cancer bone model. These data demonstrate that GPC-1 partially regulates the intrinsic and extrinsic phenotype of human BSCs and transformation into activated fibroblasts, identify novel functions of GPC-1, and suggest that GPC-1 expression in BSCs exerts inhibitory paracrine effects on the prostate cancer cells. This supports the hypothesis that GPC-1 may be a novel pharmacological target for developing anti-CAF therapeutics to control cancer.

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Journal ArticleDOI

The kinesin KIF20A promotes progression to castration-resistant prostate cancer through autocrine activation of the androgen receptor

Valeria A. Copello, +1 more
- 05 Apr 2022 - 
TL;DR: In this paper , KIF20A expression resulted in the secretion of autocrine factors in the conditioned media that activated androgen receptor (AR) and caused castration-resistant proliferation of naïve androgen-dependent cells.
Journal ArticleDOI

Substrate viscoelasticity affects human macrophage morphology and phagocytosis.

TL;DR: In this article , the authors used a tunable viscoelastic polyacrylamide hydrogel culture system to demonstrate that Viscoelasticity is an important biophysical regulator of macrophage function.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

GEPIA: a web server for cancer and normal gene expression profiling and interactive analyses.

TL;DR: GEPIA (Gene Expression Profiling Interactive Analysis) fills in the gap between cancer genomics big data and the delivery of integrated information to end users, thus helping unleash the value of the current data resources.
Journal ArticleDOI

Microenvironmental regulation of tumor progression and metastasis.

TL;DR: The paradoxical roles of the tumor microenvironment during specific stages of cancer progression and metastasis are discussed, as well as recent therapeutic attempts to re-educate stromal cells within the TME to have anti-tumorigenic effects.
Journal ArticleDOI

Fibroblasts in cancer

TL;DR: Fibroblasts are a key determinant in the malignant progression of cancer and represent an important target for cancer therapies.
Journal ArticleDOI

Functions of Cell Surface Heparan Sulfate Proteoglycans

TL;DR: Current analyses of genetic defects in Drosophila melanogaster, mice, and humans confirm most of these activities in vivo and identify additional processes that involve cell surface heparan sulfate proteoglycans.
Journal ArticleDOI

The biology and function of fibroblasts in cancer

TL;DR: Cancer-associated fibroblasts (CAFs) become synthetic machines that produce many different tumour components and have a role in creating extracellular matrix structure and metabolic and immune reprogramming of the tumour microenvironment with an impact on adaptive resistance to chemotherapy.
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