Abstract
To increase our understanding of the potential role of basic fibroblast growth factor (bFGF) in malignant progression of prostate cancer, we determined the production of bFGF, the expression of FGF receptor (flg), and the response to exogenous bFGF in LNCaP, DU 145, and PC 3 cells. We observed that these three prostate cancer cell lines, which differed in their dependence on androgens for growth in vitro and in their in vivo behavior in nude mice, could be distinguished as follows: (a) androgen-sensitive LNCaP cells, which do not metastasize in nude mice, did not produce measurable amounts of bFGF, expressed small but measurable amounts of FGF receptor mRNA, and did respond to exogenous bFGF; (b) androgen-insensitive, moderately metastatic DU 145 cells did produce measurable amounts of biologically active bFGF, expressed large amounts of FGF receptor mRNA, and responded to exogenous bFGF and the heparin-binding fractions from DU 145 cell extracts; (c) androgen-insensitive and highly metastatic PC 3 cells also produced measurable amounts of bFGF but did not demonstrate a growth response to either the heparin-binding fractions from PC 3 cell extracts or exogenous bFGF, even though large amounts of FGF receptor mRNA were expressed in PC 3 cells. These results suggest the possibility that differences in production of, and response to, bFGF may be associated with different biological behavior.
Footnotes
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↵1 This work was supported by the Whirlpool Foundation, Grants 90-44 and JFRA 304 from the American Cancer Society, and the Cancer and Urology Research Endowment Fund of the University of Chicago.
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↵2 To whom requests for reprints should be addressed, at Box 403, The University of Chicago, 5841 South Maryland Avenue, Chicago, IL 60637.
- Received August 6, 1991.
- Accepted November 12, 1991.
- ©1992 American Association for Cancer Research.