| Literature DB >> 34676924 |
Matthew J Mosquera1, Sungwoong Kim2,3, Rohan Bareja4,5, Zhou Fang3, Shuangyi Cai3, Heng Pan4,5, Muhammad Asad6, Maria Laura Martin4, Michael Sigouros4, Florencia M Rowdo4, Sarah Ackermann4, Jared Capuano4, Jacob Bernheim4, Cynthia Cheung4, Ashley Doane4, Nicholas Brady6, Richa Singh6, David S Rickman6, Varun Prabhu7, Joshua E Allen7, Loredana Puca4, Ahmet F Coskun3, Mark A Rubin8, Himisha Beltran9, Juan Miguel Mosquera4,6, Olivier Elemento4,5, Ankur Singh1,2,3.
Abstract
Following treatment with androgen receptor (AR) pathway inhibitors, ≈20% of prostate cancer patients progress by shedding their AR-dependence. These tumors undergo epigenetic reprogramming turning castration-resistant prostate cancer adenocarcinoma (CRPC-Adeno) into neuroendocrine prostate cancer (CRPC-NEPC). No targeted therapies are available for CRPC-NEPCs, and there are minimal organoid models to discover new therapeutic targets against these aggressive tumors. Here, using a combination of patient tumor proteomics, RNA sequencing, spatial-omics, and a synthetic hydrogel-based organoid, putative extracellular matrix (ECM) cues that regulate the phenotypic, transcriptomic, and epigenetic underpinnings of CRPC-NEPCs are defined. Short-term culture in tumor-expressed ECM differentially regulated DNA methylation and mobilized genes in CRPC-NEPCs. The ECM type distinctly regulates the response to small-molecule inhibitors of epigenetic targets and Dopamine Receptor D2 (DRD2), the latter being an understudied target in neuroendocrine tumors. In vivo patient-derived xenograft in immunocompromised mice showed strong anti-tumor response when treated with a DRD2 inhibitor. Finally, we demonstrate that therapeutic response in CRPC-NEPCs under drug-resistant ECM conditions can be overcome by first cellular reprogramming with epigenetic inhibitors, followed by DRD2 treatment. The synthetic organoids suggest the regulatory role of ECM in therapeutic response to targeted therapies in CRPC-NEPCs and enable the discovery of therapies to overcome resistance.Entities:
Keywords: chemoresistance; dopamine receptors; epigenetics; neuroendocrine; tumor microenvironment
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Year: 2021 PMID: 34676924 PMCID: PMC8820841 DOI: 10.1002/adma.202100096
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Adv Mater ISSN: 0935-9648 Impact factor: 32.086