| Literature DB >> 29844167 |
Zhong Chen1,2, Dayong Wu3, Jennifer M Thomas-Ahner4, Changxue Lu5, Pei Zhao5, Qingfu Zhang1,2, Connor Geraghty4, Pearlly S Yan4, William Hankey1,2, Benjamin Sunkel6, Xiaolong Cheng7, Emmanuel S Antonarakis5, Qi-En Wang8, Zhihua Liu9, Tim H-M Huang7, Victor X Jin7, Steven K Clinton4, Jun Luo10, Jiaoti Huang11,2, Qianben Wang11,2,3.
Abstract
The constitutively active androgen receptor (AR) splice variant 7 (AR-V7) plays an important role in the progression of castration-resistant prostate cancer (CRPC). Although biomarker studies established the role of AR-V7 in resistance to AR-targeting therapies, how AR-V7 mediates genomic functions in CRPC remains largely unknown. Using a ChIP-exo approach, we show AR-V7 binds to distinct genomic regions and recognizes a full-length androgen-responsive element in CRPC cells and patient tissues. Remarkably, we find dramatic differences in AR-V7 cistromes across diverse CRPC cells and patient tissues, regulating different target gene sets involved in CRPC progression. Surprisingly, we discover that HoxB13 is universally required for and colocalizes with AR-V7 binding to open chromatin across CRPC genomes. HoxB13 pioneers AR-V7 binding through direct physical interaction, and collaborates with AR-V7 to up-regulate target oncogenes. Transcriptional coregulation by HoxB13 and AR-V7 was further supported by their coexpression in tumors and circulating tumor cells from CRPC patients. Importantly, HoxB13 silencing significantly decreases CRPC growth through inhibition of AR-V7 oncogenic function. These results identify HoxB13 as a pivotal upstream regulator of AR-V7-driven transcriptomes that are often cell context-dependent in CRPC, suggesting that HoxB13 may serve as a therapeutic target for AR-V7-driven prostate tumors.Entities:
Keywords: AR-V7; HoxB13; castration-resistant prostate cancer; motif-resolution cistromes
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Year: 2018 PMID: 29844167 PMCID: PMC6042123 DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1718811115
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ISSN: 0027-8424 Impact factor: 11.205