4.7 Article

Androgen receptor (AR) heterogeneity in prostate cancer and therapy resistance

Journal

CANCER LETTERS
Volume 518, Issue -, Pages 1-9

Publisher

ELSEVIER IRELAND LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.canlet.2021.06.006

Keywords

Androgen receptor; Prostate cancer; Cancer cell heterogeneity; Cancer stem cells; Therapy resistance; Castration-resistant prostate cancer

Categories

Funding

  1. U. S National Institutes of Health (NIH) National Cancer Institute (NCI) [R01CA237027, R01CA240290, R21CA237939, R21CA218635]
  2. U. S Department of Defense [W81XWH-16-1-0575]
  3. Roswell Park Comprehensive Cancer Center (RPCCC)
  4. NCI center grant [P30CA016056]
  5. RPCCC
  6. BSGSR
  7. ETM
  8. FICSR
  9. GSR
  10. LASR
  11. PNSR

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This article discusses how AR heterogeneity affects the response of prostate cancer to treatment, emphasizing the de novo resistance to ARSIs exhibited by AR-/lo PCa cells/clones. Several potential combinatorial strategies are proposed, such as combining ARSIs with stem cell targeting therapeutics, to co-target both AR+ and AR-/lo PCa cells and metastatic clones.
Androgen receptor (AR), a ligand-dependent nuclear transcription factor and a member of steroid hormone receptor family, plays an important role in prostate organogenesis by regulating epithelial differentiation and restricting cell proliferation. Although rarely mutated or amplified in treatment-naive prostate cancer (PCa), AR signaling drives tumor growth and as a result, therapies that aim to inhibit AR signaling, called ARSIs (AR signaling inhibitors), have been in clinical use for >70 years. Unfortunately, the clinical efficacy of ARSIs is short-lived and the majority of treated patients develop castration-resistant PCa (CRPC). Numerous molecular mechanisms have been proposed for castration resistance; however, the cellular basis for CRPC emergence has remained obscure. One under-appreciated cellular mechanism for CRPC development is the AR heterogeneity that pre-exists in treatment-naive primary tumors, i.e., although most PCa cells express AR (i.e., AR+), there is always a population of PCa cells that express no/low AR (i.e., AR-/lo). Importantly, this AR heterogeneity becomes accentuated during ARSI treatment and highly prominent in established CRPC. Here, we provide a succinct summary of AR heterogeneity across the PCa continuum and discuss its impact on PCa response to treatments. While AR+ PCa cells/clones exhibit exquisite sensitivities to ARSIs, AR-/lo PCa cells/clones, which are greatly enriched in stem cell signaling pathways, display de novo resistance to ARSIs. Finally, we offer several potential combinatorial strategies, e.g., ARSIs with stem cell targeting therapeutics, to co-target both AR+ and AR-/lo PCa cells and metastatic clones.

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