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Melatonin receptors in PC3 human prostate tumor cells
Author(s) -
Gilad Eli,
Laufer Menachem,
Matzkin Haim,
Zisapel Nava
Publication year - 1999
Publication title -
journal of pineal research
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.881
H-Index - 131
eISSN - 1600-079X
pISSN - 0742-3098
DOI - 10.1111/j.1600-079x.1999.tb00586.x
Subject(s) - melatonin , pertussis toxin , endocrinology , medicine , receptor , pinealocyte , cholera toxin , melatonin receptor , biology , cell growth , pineal gland , thymidine , cell , cell culture , microbiology and biotechnology , biochemistry , g protein , in vitro , genetics
Melatonin, secreted nocturnally by the pineal gland, can bind to human benign prostate epithelial cells and attenuate their growth and viability. In the present study, melatonin binding and responses were explored in the human steroid‐independent PC3 prostatic tumor cells. PC3 cells bound 125 I‐melatonin with low affinity (K d ca. 0.9 nM) at high as well as low cell density. Melatonin enhanced cGMP and 3 H‐thymidine incorporation at low, but attenuated them at high cell density. In addition, melatonin inhibited cAMP at low, but augmented it at high cell density. These effects were associated with an increase in cell count at low‐ but not high‐density cultures. Pertussis toxin treatment suppressed 125 I‐melatonin binding and ablated all the effects of melatonin on 3 H‐thymidine incorporation, cAMP, and cGMP at both cell densities. Cholera toxin treatment failed to block the effects of melatonin on 3 H‐thymidine incorporation, but prevented the modulation by melatonin of cAMP at low and cGMP at high cell density. The cGMP analog 8‐Br‐cGMP, inhibited melatonin's effects on 3 H‐thymidine incorporation at both cell densities. H89, a protein kinase A inhibitor, prevented melatonin's effects on 3 H‐thymidine incorporation at low but not high cell density. These results provide the first demonstration of direct interaction of melatonin with hormone‐insensitive prostate tumor cells. The melatonin receptors in the PC3 cells are coupled to pertussis toxin‐sensitive G proteins to induce cell density‐dependent changes in cGMP, cAMP, and cell growth.