| Literature DB >> 24948871 |
Barbara Kahn1, Joanne Collazo1, Natasha Kyprianou1.
Abstract
The role of the androgen receptor (AR) signaling axis in the progression of prostate cancer is a cornerstone to our understanding of the molecular mechanisms causing castration-resistant prostate cancer (CRPC). Resistance of advanced prostate cancer to available treatment options makes it a clinical challenge that results in approximately 30,000 deaths of American men every year. Since the historic discovery by Dr. Huggins more than 70 years ago, androgen deprivation therapy (ADT) has been the principal treatment for advanced prostate cancer. Initially, ADT induces apoptosis of androgen-dependent prostate cancer epithelial cells and regression of androgen-dependent tumors. However, the majority of patients with advanced prostate cancer progress and become refractory to ADT due to emergence of androgen-independent prostate cancer cells driven by aberrant AR activation. Microtubule-targeting agents such as taxanes, docetaxel and paclitaxel, have enjoyed success in the treatment of metastatic prostate cancer; although new, recently designed mitosis-specific agents, such as the polo-kinase and kinesin-inhibitors, have yielded clinically disappointing results. Docetaxel, as a first-line chemotherapy, improves prostate cancer patient survival by months, but tumor resistance to these therapeutic agents inevitably develops. On a molecular level, progression to CRPC is characterized by aberrant AR expression, de novo intraprostatic androgen production, and cross talk with other oncogenic pathways. Emerging evidence suggests that reactivation of epithelial-mesenchymal-transition (EMT) processes may facilitate the development of not only prostate cancer but also prostate cancer metastases. EMT is characterized by gain of mesenchymal characteristics and invasiveness accompanied by loss of cell polarity, with an increasing number of studies focusing on the direct involvement of androgen-AR signaling axis in EMT, tumor progression, and therapeutic resistance. In this article, we discuss the current knowledge of mechanisms via which the AR signaling drives therapeutic resistance in prostate cancer metastatic progression and the novel therapeutic interventions targeting AR in CRPC.Entities:
Keywords: Androgen receptor; castration resistance; epithelial-mesenchymal transition.; prostate cancer; taxanes; therapeutic resistance; tumor progression
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2014 PMID: 24948871 PMCID: PMC4062951 DOI: 10.7150/ijbs.8671
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Biol Sci ISSN: 1449-2288 Impact factor: 6.580
Molecular Markers Associated with Prostate Cancer Progression to Castration Resistant Disease.
| Molecular Marker | Function and Role in CRPC | References |
|---|---|---|
| AR | Overexpression, increased transcriptional activity or aberrant signaling, promotes EMT, invasion and metastasis | Shafi et al. 2013 |
| PTEN/RAS/MAPK | Active signaling pathway accelerates cancer progression to metastasis | Carver et al. 2011 |
| PTEN/AKT | Signaling pathway alterations or constitutive activation promotes tumor growth and metastasis | Morgan et al. 2009 |
| E-cadherin | Required for cell-cell adhesion and invasive properties, loss promotes EMT | Umbas et al. 1992 |
| ZO-1 | Regulation of cell migration by modulating tight junction assembly | Franke et al. 1982 |
| N-cadherin | Overexpression promotes growth, migration, invasion and metastasis | Tanaka et al. 2010 |
| β- Catenin | Overexpression promotes cancer invasion and metastasis | Pontes et al. 2010 |
| Fibronectin | Promotes adhesion to ECM, regulates tumor invasion and confers resistance to anoikis | Fornaro et al. 2003 |
| Collagen I | Loss promotes ECM degradation and bone metastasis | Jin et al. 2011 |
| Vimentin | Overexpression promotes cancer cell invasion | Franke et al. 1982 |
| Zeb1 | Overexpression promotes EMT and tumor invasion | Kim et al. 2013 |
| Slug | Overexpression promotes EMT and tumor invasion | Behnsawy et. al 2013 |
| Twist | Overexpression promotes EMT and tumor invasion | Behnsawy et. al 2013 |
| Snail | Overexpression promotes EMT and tumor invasion | Behnsawy et. al 2013 |
| ETS-1 | Overexpression promotes prostate cancer metastasis and increased transcriptional activity promotes castration resistant disease | Li et al. 2012 |
| aplhaII(b) | Mediates cellular cytoskeleton/ECM attachment, loss promotes EMT, tumor invasion and metastasis | Trikha et al. 1998 |
| Syndecan-1 | Cell surface protein regulates cell adhesion, loss correlates with cancer progression | Contreras et al. 2010 |
| Notch-1 | Down-regulation inhibits cancer cell growth, migration, invasion, and induces apoptosis | Wang et al. 2010 |
| PDGF-1 | Overexpression promotes cancer cell invasion and angiogenesis | Kong et al. 2008 |
| DAB2IP | Modulates EMT via GsK-3β-catenin, loss facilitates EMT and metastasis | Xie et al. 2010 |