| Literature DB >> 30248372 |
Jie Luo1, Jing Tian2, FuJu Chou3, Changyi Lin3, Emily Zixin Xing3, Li Zuo4, Yuanjie Niu2, Shuyuan Yeh3, Chawnshang Chang5.
Abstract
Chemotherapy with docetaxel remains the effective therapy to suppress castration resistant prostate cancer (CRPC) in some patients. However, most chemotherapy with docetaxel eventually fails with the development of docetaxel resistance after 18-weeks of treatment. Here we found docetaxel treatment might have an adverse effect of increasing the androgen receptor (AR) protein level in the CRPC cells, and combining docetaxel with anti-AR therapy using AR-shRNA or the AR degradation enhancer ASC-J9® may increase docetaxel sensitivity to better suppress the CRPC cell growth. Mechanism dissection found docetaxel might have the adverse effect of increasing the AR protein stability via suppressing the AR ubiquitination due to the increased AR phosphorylation. The consequence of such increased AR protein may then lead to increase p21 expression via transcriptional regulation. Preclinical studies with in vitro cells lines also demonstrated that targeting AR with ASC-J9® led to suppressing the AR-increased p21 expression to improve the docetaxel sensitivity in the CRPC cells that already developed docetaxel resistance. Together, these results suggest that a combined therapy of docetaxel and ASC-J9® is a novel therapy to better suppress CRPC in patients that already developed docetaxel resistance.Entities:
Keywords: ASC-J9®; Androgen receptor; Docetaxel; Prostate cancer; p21
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Year: 2018 PMID: 30248372 DOI: 10.1016/j.canlet.2018.09.025
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cancer Lett ISSN: 0304-3835 Impact factor: 8.679