4.3 Article

Identification of novel genes that regulate androgen receptor signaling and growth of androgen-deprived prostate cancer cells

Journal

ONCOTARGET
Volume 6, Issue 15, Pages 13088-13104

Publisher

IMPACT JOURNALS LLC
DOI: 10.18632/oncotarget.3743

Keywords

prostate cancer; androgen receptor; shRNA; IGSF8; tumor progression

Funding

  1. AFPE Pre-Doctoral Fellowship
  2. Department of Defense Prostate Cancer Research Program [W81XWH-08-1-0070]
  3. NIGMS [1P20GM109091-01]
  4. NIH [P30 GM103336, R33 CA95996, R01 AG028687]
  5. SC INBRE
  6. Cancer Research Society, Canada

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Prostate cancer progression to castration refractory disease is associated with anomalous transcriptional activity of the androgen receptor (AR) in an androgen-depleted milieu. To identify novel gene products whose downregulation transactivates AR in prostate cancer cells, we performed a screen of enzymatically-generated shRNA lenti-libraries selecting for transduced LNCaP cells with elevated expression of a fluorescent reporter gene under the control of an AR-responsive promoter. The shRNAs present in selected populations were analyzed using high-throughput sequencing to identify target genes. Highly enriched gene targets were then validated with siRNAs against selected genes, testing first for increased expression of luciferase from an AR-responsive promoter and then for altered expression of endogenous androgen-regulated genes in LNCaP cells. We identified 20 human genes whose silencing affected the expression of exogenous and endogenous androgen-responsive genes in prostate cancer cells grown in androgen-depleted medium. Knockdown of four of these genes upregulated the expression of endogenous AR targets and siRNAs targeting two of these genes (IGSF8 and RTN1) enabled androgen-independent proliferation of androgen-dependent cells. The effects of IGSF8 appear to be mediated through its interaction with a tetraspanin protein, CD9, previously implicated in prostate cancer progression. Remarkably, homozygous deletions of IGSF8 are found almost exclusively in prostate cancers but not in other cancer types. Our study shows that androgen independence can be achieved through the inhibition of specific genes and reveals a novel set of genes that regulate AR signaling in prostate cancers.

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