Englander Institute for Precision Medicine

Linking prostate cancer cell AR heterogeneity to distinct castration and enzalutamide responses.

TitleLinking prostate cancer cell AR heterogeneity to distinct castration and enzalutamide responses.
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication2018
AuthorsLi Q, Deng Q, Chao H-P, Liu X, Lu Y, Lin K, Liu B, Tang GW, Zhang D, Tracz A, Jeter C, Rycaj K, Calhoun-Davis T, Huang J, Rubin MA, Beltran H, Shen J, Chatta G, Puzanov I, Mohler JL, Wang J, Zhao R, Kirk J, Chen X, Tang DG
JournalNat Commun
Volume9
Issue1
Pagination3600
Date Published2018 Sep 06
ISSN2041-1723
KeywordsAnimals, Antineoplastic Agents, Benzamides, Cell Line, Tumor, Drug Resistance, Neoplasm, Gene Expression Regulation, Neoplastic, Humans, Male, Mice, Inbred NOD, Mice, Knockout, Molecular Targeted Therapy, Nitriles, Phenylthiohydantoin, Prostatic Neoplasms, Castration-Resistant, Proto-Oncogene Proteins c-bcl-2, Receptors, Androgen, Signal Transduction, Xenograft Model Antitumor Assays
Abstract

Expression of androgen receptor (AR) in prostate cancer (PCa) is heterogeneous but the functional significance of AR heterogeneity remains unclear. Screening ~200 castration-resistant PCa (CRPC) cores and whole-mount sections (from 89 patients) reveals 3 AR expression patterns: nuclear (nuc-AR), mixed nuclear/cytoplasmic (nuc/cyto-AR), and low/no expression (AR). Xenograft modeling demonstrates that AR CRPC is enzalutamide-sensitive but AR CRPC is resistant. Genome editing-derived AR and AR-knockout LNCaP cell clones exhibit distinct biological and tumorigenic properties and contrasting responses to enzalutamide. RNA-Seq and biochemical analyses, coupled with experimental combinatorial therapy, identify BCL-2 as a critical therapeutic target and provide proof-of-concept therapeutic regimens for both AR and AR CRPC. Our study links AR expression heterogeneity to distinct castration/enzalutamide responses and has important implications in understanding the cellular basis of prostate tumor responses to AR-targeting therapies and in facilitating development of novel therapeutics to target AR PCa cells/clones.

DOI10.1038/s41467-018-06067-7
Alternate JournalNat Commun
PubMed ID30190514
PubMed Central IDPMC6127155
Grant ListS10 OD025183 / OD / NIH HHS / United States
CA155693 / / U.S. Department of Health & Human Services | NIH | Center for Scientific Review (CSR) / International

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