| Literature DB >> 33431496 |
Jonathan Welti1, Adam Sharp1,2, Neil Pegg3, Johann S de Bono4,2, Nigel Brooks3, Wei Yuan1, Christopher McNair5, Saswati N Chand5, Abhijit Pal2, Ines Figueiredo1, Ruth Riisnaes1, Bora Gurel1, Jan Rekowski1, Denisa Bogdan1, William West3, Barbara Young6, Meera Raja6, Amy Prosser6, Jordan Lane6, Stuart Thomson6, Jenny Worthington7, Stuart Onions6, Jonathan Shannon6, Silvia Paoletta6, Richard Brown6, Don Smyth6, Gareth W Harbottle6, Veronica S Gil1, Susana Miranda1, Mateus Crespo1, Ana Ferreira1, Rita Pereira1, Nina Tunariu2, Suzanne Carreira1, Antje J Neeb1, Jian Ning1, Amanda Swain1, David Taddei6, Matthew J Schiewer5, Karen E Knudsen5.
Abstract
Resistance to androgen receptor (AR) blockade in castration-resistant prostate cancer (CRPC) is associated with sustained AR signaling, including through alternative splicing of AR (AR-SV). Inhibitors of transcriptional coactivators that regulate AR activity, including the paralog histone acetyltransferase proteins p300 and CBP, are attractive therapeutic targets for lethal prostate cancer. Herein, we validate targeting p300/CBP as a therapeutic strategy for lethal prostate cancer and describe CCS1477, a novel small-molecule inhibitor of the p300/CBP conserved bromodomain. We show that CCS1477 inhibits cell proliferation in prostate cancer cell lines and decreases AR- and C-MYC-regulated gene expression. In AR-SV-driven models, CCS1477 has antitumor activity, regulating AR and C-MYC signaling. Early clinical studies suggest that CCS1477 modulates KLK3 blood levels and regulates CRPC biopsy biomarker expression. Overall, CCS1477 shows promise for the treatment of patients with advanced prostate cancer. SIGNIFICANCE: Treating CRPC remains challenging due to persistent AR signaling. Inhibiting transcriptional AR coactivators is an attractive therapeutic strategy. CCS1477, an inhibitor of p300/CBP, inhibits growth and AR activity in CRPC models, and can affect metastatic CRPC target expression in serial clinical biopsies.See related commentary by Rasool et al., p. 1011.This article is highlighted in the In This Issue feature, p. 995. ©2021 American Association for Cancer Research.Entities:
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Year: 2021 PMID: 33431496 PMCID: PMC8102310 DOI: 10.1158/2159-8290.CD-20-0751
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cancer Discov ISSN: 2159-8274 Impact factor: 38.272