PLoS ONE (Jan 2013)

Cholestane-3β, 5α, 6β-triol suppresses proliferation, migration, and invasion of human prostate cancer cells.

  • Ching-Yu Lin,
  • Chieh Huo,
  • Li-Kuo Kuo,
  • Richard A Hiipakka,
  • Richard Baker Jones,
  • Hui-Ping Lin,
  • Yuwen Hung,
  • Liang-Cheng Su,
  • Jen-Chih Tseng,
  • Ying-Yu Kuo,
  • Yu-Ling Wang,
  • Yasuhisa Fukui,
  • Yung-Hsi Kao,
  • John M Kokontis,
  • Chien-Chih Yeh,
  • Linyi Chen,
  • Shiaw-Der Yang,
  • Hsiao-Hui Fu,
  • Ya-Wen Chen,
  • Kelvin K C Tsai,
  • Jang-Yang Chang,
  • Chih-Pin Chuu

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0065734
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 8, no. 6
p. e65734

Abstract

Read online

Oxysterols are oxidation products of cholesterol. Cholestane-3β, 5α, 6β-triol (abbreviated as triol) is one of the most abundant and active oxysterols. Here, we report that triol exhibits anti-cancer activity against human prostate cancer cells. Treatment of cells with triol dose-dependently suppressed proliferation of LNCaP CDXR-3, DU-145, and PC-3 human prostate cancer cells and reduced colony formation in soft agar. Oral administration of triol at 20 mg/kg daily for three weeks significantly retarded the growth of PC-3 xenografts in nude mice. Flow cytometric analysis revealed that triol treatment at 10-40 µM caused G1 cell cycle arrest while the TUNEL assay indicated that triol treatment at 20-40 µM induced apoptosis in all three cell lines. Micro-Western Arrays and traditional Western blotting methods indicated that triol treatment resulted in reduced expression of Akt1, phospho-Akt Ser473, phospho-Akt Thr308, PDK1, c-Myc, and Skp2 protein levels as well as accumulation of the cell cycle inhibitor p27(Kip). Triol treatment also resulted in reduced Akt1 protein expression in PC-3 xenografts. Overexpression of Skp2 in PC-3 cells partially rescued the growth inhibition caused by triol. Triol treatment suppressed migration and invasion of DU-145, PC-3, and CDXR-3 cells. The expression levels of proteins associated with epithelial-mesenchymal transition as well as focal adhesion kinase were affected by triol treatment in these cells. Triol treatment caused increased expression of E-cadherin protein levels but decreased expression of N-cadherin, vimentin, Slug, FAK, phospho-FAK Ser722, and phospho-FAK Tyr861 protein levels. Confocal laser microscopy revealed redistribution of β-actin and α-tubulin at the periphery of the CDXR-3 and DU-145 cells. Our observations suggest that triol may represent a promising therapeutic agent for advanced metastatic prostate cancer.