| Literature DB >> 36038661 |
Chaohao Li1, Jinpeng Liu2,3, Daheng He2,3, Fengyi Mao1, Xiongjian Rao1, Yue Zhao4, Nadia A Lanman5,6, Majid Kazemian7,8, Elia Farah7, Jinghui Liu1, Chrispus M Ngule1, Zhuangzhuang Zhang1, Yanquan Zhang1, Yifan Kong1, Lang Li4, Chi Wang2,3, Xiaoqi Liu9,10.
Abstract
Prostate cancer (PCa) continues to threaten men's health, and treatment targeting the androgen receptor (AR) pathway is the major therapy for PCa patients. Several second-generation androgen receptor inhibitors (SG-ARIs), including enzalutamide (ENZ), apalutamide (APA) and darolutamide (DARO), have been developed to better block the activity of AR. Unavoidably, emergence of resistance to these novel drugs still persists. Herein, we identified glutathione S-transferase Mu 2 (GSTM2) as an important determinant in the acquisition of resistance to SG-ARIs. Elevated GSTM2 was detected in enzalutamide-resistant (ENZ-R) PCa, and overexpression of GSTM2 in naïve enzalutamide-sensitive (ENZ-S) cells effectively transformed them to ENZ-R PCa. Aryl hydrocarbon receptor (AhR), the upstream transcription factor, was implicated in the overexpression of GSTM2 in ENZ-R cells. Mechanistically, GSTM2 antagonized the effect of ENZ by rescuing cells from oxidative stress-associated damage and activation of p38 MAPK pathway. Surprisingly, high GSTM2 levels also associated with cross-resistance to APA and DARO. Taking together, these results provide new insight to ameliorate resistance to SG-ARIs and improve treatment outcome.Entities:
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Year: 2022 PMID: 36038661 DOI: 10.1038/s41388-022-02444-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Oncogene ISSN: 0950-9232 Impact factor: 8.756