2 research outputs found
Role of the Phospholipase A<sub>2</sub> Receptor in Liposome Drug Delivery in Prostate Cancer Cells
The M-type phospholipase A<sub>2</sub> receptor (PLA2R1) is a member
of the C-type lectin superfamily and can internalize secreted phospholipase
A<sub>2</sub> (sPLA<sub>2</sub>) via endocytosis in non-cancer cells.
sPLA<sub>2</sub> itself was recently shown to be overexpressed in
prostate tumors and to be a possible mediator of metastasis; however,
little is known about the expression of PLA2R1 or its function in
prostate cancers. Thus, we examined PLA2R1 expression in primary prostate
cells (PCS-440-010) and human prostate cancer cells (LNCaP, DU-145,
and PC-3), and we determined the effect of PLA2R1 knockdown on cytotoxicity
induced by free or liposome-encapsulated chemotherapeutics. Immunoblot
analysis demonstrated that the expression of PLA2R1 was higher in
prostate cancer cells compared to that in primary prostate cells.
Knockdown of PLA2R1 expression in PC-3 cells using shRNA increased
cell proliferation and did not affect the toxicity of cisplatin, doxorubicin
(Dox), and docetaxel. In contrast, PLA2R1 knockdown increased the
in vitro toxicity of Dox encapsulated in sPLA<sub>2</sub> responsive
liposomes (SPRL) and correlated with increased Dox and SPRL uptake.
Knockdown of PLA2R1 also increased the expression of Group IIA and
X sPLA<sub>2</sub>. These data show the novel findings that PLA2R1
is expressed in prostate cancer cells, that PLA2R1 expression alters
cell proliferation, and that PLA2R1 modulates the behavior of liposome-based
nanoparticles. Furthermore, these studies suggest that PLA2R1 may
represent a novel molecular target for controlling tumor growth or
modulating delivery of lipid-based nanomedicines