| Literature DB >> 30242092 |
Niveditha Nerlakanti1,2, Jiqiang Yao3, Duy T Nguyen1,4, Ami K Patel1, Alexey M Eroshkin5, Harshani R Lawrence6,7, Muhammad Ayaz6, Brent M Kuenzi2,7, Neha Agarwal1, Yunyun Chen3, Steven Gunawan7, Rezaul M Karim7, Norbert Berndt7, John Puskas8, Anthony M Magliocco8, Domenico Coppola1,9, Jasreman Dhillon9, Jingsong Zhang10, Subramaniam Shymalagovindarajan11, Uwe Rix7,12, Youngchul Kim3, Ranjan Perera11, Nicholas J Lawrence7,12, Ernst Schonbrunn7,12, Kiran Mahajan13,4,12.
Abstract
Resistance to androgen receptor (AR) antagonists is a significant problem in the treatment of castration-resistant prostate cancers (CRPC). Identification of the mechanisms by which CRPCs evade androgen deprivation therapies (ADT) is critical to develop novel therapeutics. We uncovered that CRPCs rely on BRD4-HOXB13 epigenetic reprogramming for androgen-independent cell proliferation. Mechanistically, BRD4, a member of the BET bromodomain family, epigenetically promotes HOXB13 expression. Consistently, genetic disruption of HOXB13 or pharmacological suppression of its mRNA and protein expression by the novel dual-activity BET bromodomain-kinase inhibitors directly correlates with rapid induction of apoptosis, potent inhibition of tumor cell proliferation and cell migration, and suppression of CRPC growth. Integrative analysis revealed that the BRD4-HOXB13 transcriptome comprises a proliferative gene network implicated in cell-cycle progression, nucleotide metabolism, and chromatin assembly. Notably, although the core HOXB13 target genes responsive to BET inhibitors (HOTBIN10) are overexpressed in metastatic cases, in ADT-treated CRPC cell lines and patient-derived circulating tumor cells (CTC) they are insensitive to AR depletion or blockade. Among the HOTBIN10 genes, AURKB and MELK expression correlates with HOXB13 expression in CTCs of mCRPC patients who did not respond to abiraterone (ABR), suggesting that AURKB inhibitors could be used additionally against high-risk HOXB13-positive metastatic prostate cancers. Combined, our study demonstrates that BRD4-HOXB13-HOTBIN10 regulatory circuit maintains the malignant state of CRPCs and identifies a core proproliferative network driving ADT resistance that is targetable with potent dual-activity bromodomain-kinase inhibitors. ©2018 American Association for Cancer Research.Entities:
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Year: 2018 PMID: 30242092 PMCID: PMC6528782 DOI: 10.1158/1535-7163.MCT-18-0602
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mol Cancer Ther ISSN: 1535-7163 Impact factor: 6.261