Mi Nam Lee, Seong-Eung Cha, Hyunwoo Lim, Eung-Sam Kim
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Testosterone Enhances Wound Healing and Stress Resistance in A549 Lung Adenocarcinoma Cells via Actin Remodeling and AQP3 Upregulation.
The role of androgens in lung function is contentious, yet their effects on type II alveolar epithelial cells (AECII)-derived lung cancer models remain underexplored. This study reveals that androgens provide survival advantages to A549 cells, a male lung adenocarcinoma AECII cell line, by promoting wound healing and enhancing stress resilience. We demonstrated that testosterone and dihydrotestosterone (DHT) significantly upregulate aquaporin 3 (AQP3) through androgen receptor (AR) accumulation and ERK pathway activation, thereby mitigating cell death under oxidative stress induced by hydrogen peroxide and cyclic cell-stretching. Testosterone facilitated cellular wound healing by promoting actin cytoskeleton remodeling and focal adhesion complex formation, reliant on AR rather than AQP3. Under air-liquid interface culture conditions, testosterone consistently induced AQP3 upregulation, enhanced actin remodeling, and facilitated cellular wound healing responses. Validation of these findings was achieved through gene expression analyses, protein level assessments, cell imaging, and in vitro wound healing assays. The underlying molecular mechanisms of androgen action were elucidated using AQP3- and AR-specific siRNAs and pharmacological inhibitors. These findings underscore the urgent need to investigate the role of sex hormones in lung cancer and other androgen-responsive epithelial models, focusing on their influence on cancer cell survival and motility.
期刊介绍:
Each month, the journal publishes easy-to-assimilate, up-to-the minute reports of experimental findings by researchers using a wide range of the latest techniques. Promoting the aims of cell biologists worldwide, papers reporting on structure and function - especially where they relate to the physiology of the whole cell - are strongly encouraged. Molecular biology is welcome, as long as articles report findings that are seen in the wider context of cell biology. In covering all areas of the cell, the journal is both appealing and accessible to a broad audience. Authors whose papers do not appeal to cell biologists in general because their topic is too specialized (e.g. infectious microbes, protozoology) are recommended to send them to more relevant journals. Papers reporting whole animal studies or work more suited to a medical journal, e.g. histopathological studies or clinical immunology, are unlikely to be accepted, unless they are fully focused on some important cellular aspect.
These last remarks extend particularly to papers on cancer. Unless firmly based on some deeper cellular or molecular biological principle, papers that are highly specialized in this field, with limited appeal to cell biologists at large, should be directed towards journals devoted to cancer, there being very many from which to choose.