Stromal cells from human benign prostate hyperplasia produce a growth-inhibitory factor for LNCaP prostate cancer cells,identified as interleukin-6 |
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Authors: | Armelle Degeorges,Roger Tatoud,Franç oise Fauvel-Lafeve,Marie-Pierre Podgorniak,Guy Millot,Patricia de Cremoux,Fabien Calvo |
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Abstract: | To understand specific interactions between stromal cells and epithelial cells in benign prostatic hyperplasia (BPH) and prostatic adenocarcinoma, we developed stromal-cell cultures from normal human prostate (PNX) and BPH (BH101), composed of fibroblasts and myofibroblasts. Their role in epithelial-cell growth was studied using the established cancer cell lines LNCaP, PC3 and DU 145 and an SV40 large T-immortalized normal epithelial-cell line, PNTIA, in double-diffusion co-culture chambers. PNTIA was stimulated by PNX (x 1.6) and more strongly by BH101 stromal cells (x 2.7). Conversely, LNCaP growth decreased by 50% in the presence of BH101 stromal cells (stromal/epithelial ratio: 10). A BH101-conditioned medium (CM), obtained in serum-free conditions, induced 90% inhibition of [3H]thymidine incorporation of the LNCaP androgen-sensitive cell line. Two other androgen-independent prostate cancer cell lines were either insensitive to BH101 CM (PC3) or slightly inhibited (40% for DU145). BH101 produced large amounts of IL-Iβ, IL-6 and IL-8. HPLC gel filtration enabled separation of an inhibitory fraction which contained IL-6. IL-6 was demonstrated to be responsible for the strong inhibitory effect since an IL-6-neutralizing antibody abolished this inhibition, which was reproduced by human recombinant IL-6. Recombinant IL-6 growth inhibition was observed only on LNCaP prostate cancer androgen-sensitive cells. © 1996 Wiley-Liss, Inc. |
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