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      The molecular function of kallikrein‐related peptidase 14 demonstrates a key modulatory role in advanced prostate cancer

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          Abstract

          Kallikrein‐related peptidase 14 (KLK14) is one of the several secreted KLK serine proteases involved in prostate cancer (PCa) pathogenesis. While relatively understudied, recent reports have identified KLK14 as overexpressed during PCa development. However, the modulation of KLK14 expression during PCa progression and the molecular and biological functions of this protease in the prostate tumor microenvironment remain unknown. To determine the modulation of KLK14 expression during PCa progression, we analyzed the expression levels of KLK14 in patient samples using publicly available databases and immunohistochemistry. In order to delineate the molecular mechanisms involving KLK14 in PCa progression, we integrated proteomic, transcriptomic, and in vitro assays with the goal to identify substrates, related‐signaling pathways, and functional roles of this protease. We showed that KLK14 expression is elevated in advanced PCa, and particularly in metastasis. Additionally, KLK14 levels were found to be decreased in PCa tissues from patients responsive to neoadjuvant therapy compared to untreated patients. Furthermore, we also identified that KLK14 expression reoccurred in patients who developed castrate‐resistant PCa. The combination of proteomic and transcriptomic analysis as well as functional assays revealed several new KLK14 substrates (agrin, desmoglein 2, vitronectin, laminins) and KLK14‐regulated genes (Interleukin 32, midkine, SRY‐Box 9), particularly an involvement of the mitogen‐activated protein kinase 1 and interleukin 1 receptor pathways, and an involvement of KLK14 in the regulation of cellular migration, supporting its involvement in aggressive features of PCa progression. In conclusion, our work showed that KLK14 expression is associated with the development of aggressive PCa suggesting that targeting this protease could offer a novel route to limit the progression of prostate tumors. Additional work is necessary to determine the benefits and implications of targeting/cotargeting KLK14 in PCa as well as to determine the potential use of KLK14 expression as a predictor of PCa aggressiveness or response to treatment.

          Abstract

          Kallikrein‐related peptidase 14 (KLK14) is a secreted serine protease belonging to the kallikrein‐related‐peptidase family. We identified that KLK14 is overexpressed in advanced prostate cancer and acts on various substrates involved in adhesion, migration, and invasion of cancer cells, thus modulating genes and signaling pathways essential for prostate cancer progression. These results suggest that KLK14 is a potential target to control aggressiveness of prostate tumors.

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          Most cited references56

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          Androgen Receptor Pathway-Independent Prostate Cancer Is Sustained through FGF Signaling.

          Androgen receptor (AR) signaling is a distinctive feature of prostate carcinoma (PC) and represents the major therapeutic target for treating metastatic prostate cancer (mPC). Though highly effective, AR antagonism can produce tumors that bypass a functional requirement for AR, often through neuroendocrine (NE) transdifferentiation. Through the molecular assessment of mPCs over two decades, we find a phenotypic shift has occurred in mPC with the emergence of an AR-null NE-null phenotype. These "double-negative" PCs are notable for elevated FGF and MAPK pathway activity, which can bypass AR dependence. Pharmacological inhibitors of MAPK or FGFR repressed the growth of double-negative PCs in vitro and in vivo. Our results indicate that FGF/MAPK blockade may be particularly efficacious against mPCs with an AR-null phenotype.
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            Emerging roles of proteases in tumour suppression.

            Proteases have long been associated with cancer progression because of their ability to degrade extracellular matrices, which facilitates invasion and metastasis. However, recent studies have shown that these enzymes target a diversity of substrates and favour all steps of tumour evolution. Unexpectedly, the post-trial studies have also revealed proteases with tumour-suppressive effects. These effects are associated with more than 30 different enzymes that belong to three distinct protease classes. What are the clinical implications of these findings?
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              Identifying and quantifying proteolytic events and the natural N terminome by terminal amine isotopic labeling of substrates.

              Analysis of the sequence and nature of protein N termini has many applications. Defining the termini of proteins for proteome annotation in the Human Proteome Project is of increasing importance. Terminomics analysis of protease cleavage sites in degradomics for substrate discovery is a key new application. Here we describe the step-by-step procedures for performing terminal amine isotopic labeling of substrates (TAILS), a 2- to 3-d (depending on method of labeling) high-throughput method to identify and distinguish protease-generated neo-N termini from mature protein N termini with all natural modifications with high confidence. TAILS uses negative selection to enrich for all N-terminal peptides and uses primary amine labeling-based quantification as the discriminating factor. Labeling is versatile and suited to many applications, including biochemical and cell culture analyses in vitro; in vivo analyses using tissue samples from animal and human sources can also be readily performed. At the protein level, N-terminal and lysine amines are blocked by dimethylation (formaldehyde/sodium cyanoborohydride) and isotopically labeled by incorporating heavy and light dimethylation reagents or stable isotope labeling with amino acids in cell culture labels. Alternatively, easy multiplex sample analysis can be achieved using amine blocking and labeling with isobaric tags for relative and absolute quantification, also known as iTRAQ. After tryptic digestion, N-terminal peptide separation is achieved using a high-molecular-weight dendritic polyglycerol aldehyde polymer that binds internal tryptic and C-terminal peptides that now have N-terminal alpha amines. The unbound naturally blocked (acetylation, cyclization, methylation and so on) or labeled mature N-terminal and neo-N-terminal peptides are recovered by ultrafiltration and analyzed by tandem mass spectrometry (MS/MS). Hierarchical substrate winnowing discriminates substrates from the background proteolysis products and non-cleaved proteins by peptide isotope quantification and bioinformatics search criteria.
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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                thomas.kryza@mater.uq.edu.au
                Journal
                Mol Oncol
                Mol Oncol
                10.1002/(ISSN)1878-0261
                MOL2
                Molecular Oncology
                John Wiley and Sons Inc. (Hoboken )
                1574-7891
                1878-0261
                28 November 2019
                January 2020
                : 14
                : 1 ( doiID: 10.1002/mol2.v14.1 )
                : 105-128
                Affiliations
                [ 1 ] Australian Prostate Cancer Research Centre‐Queensland (APCRC‐Q) Institute of Health & Biomedical Innovation Queensland University of Technology Woolloongabba Australia
                [ 2 ] School of Biomedical Sciences Faculty of Health Queensland University of Technology Woolloongabba Australia
                [ 3 ] Translational Research Institute Woolloongabba Australia
                [ 4 ] Mater Research Institute – The University of Queensland Brisbane Australia
                [ 5 ] Department of Chemistry Imperial College London UK
                [ 6 ] Vancouver Prostate Centre Department of Urologic Sciences University of British Columbia Canada
                [ 7 ] Faculty of Chemistry University of Gdansk Poland
                [ 8 ] Mater Health Services South Brisbane Australia
                Author notes
                [*] [* ] Correspondence

                T. Kryza, Mater Research Institute – The University of Queensland at the Translational Research Institute, 37 Kent street, Woolloongabba 4102, Australia

                Tel: +61 420 840 603

                E‐mail: thomas.kryza@ 123456mater.uq.edu.au

                Author information
                https://orcid.org/0000-0003-1668-8551
                Article
                MOL212587
                10.1002/1878-0261.12587
                6944120
                31630475
                9e91f604-11a4-4115-a7bc-32a857e31c0e
                © 2019 The Authors. Published by FEBS Press and John Wiley & Sons Ltd.

                This is an open access article under the terms of the http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ License, which permits use, distribution and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.

                History
                : 23 May 2019
                : 06 September 2019
                : 18 October 2019
                Page count
                Figures: 6, Tables: 3, Pages: 24, Words: 14892
                Funding
                Funded by: Prostate Cancer Foundation of Australia , open-funder-registry 10.13039/501100000927;
                Funded by: Movember Revolutionary Team Award
                Funded by: National Health & Medical Research Council of Australia
                Funded by: Queensland Cancer Fund grant
                Funded by: Australian Government
                Funded by: Lush (UK)
                Categories
                Research Article
                Research Articles
                Custom metadata
                2.0
                January 2020
                Converter:WILEY_ML3GV2_TO_JATSPMC version:5.7.4 mode:remove_FC converted:06.01.2020

                Oncology & Radiotherapy
                castrate‐resistant prostate cancer,kallikrein‐related peptidase,metastasis,prostate cancer,protease,protease‐substrate

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