4.8 Article

Androgen Receptor Splice Variants Determine Taxane Sensitivity in Prostate Cancer

Journal

CANCER RESEARCH
Volume 74, Issue 8, Pages 2270-2282

Publisher

AMER ASSOC CANCER RESEARCH
DOI: 10.1158/0008-5472.CAN-13-2876

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Funding

  1. U.S. NIH [R01 CA137020-01, U54 CA143876]
  2. NIH Physical Sciences Oncology Center at Cornell
  3. NCI Pacific Northwest Prostate Cancer SPORE [2 P50 CA 097186-12]
  4. DOD-CDMRP
  5. Prostate Cancer Foundation
  6. NCI [PO1-163227-01A1, F32CA177104]
  7. DOD [PC121152]
  8. Department of Veterans Affairs Research Service
  9. Weill Cornell Clinical and Translational Science Center
  10. Italian Association for Cancer Research (AIRC)
  11. Genitourinary Oncology Research Fund
  12. [PO1 CA85859]

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Prostate cancer growth depends on androgen receptor signaling. Androgen ablation therapy induces expression of constitutively active androgen receptor splice variants that drive disease progression. Taxanes are a standard of care therapy in castration-resistant prostate cancer (CRPC); however, mechanisms underlying the clinical activity of taxanes are poorly understood. Recent work suggests that the microtubule network of prostate cells is critical for androgen receptor nuclear translocation and activity. In this study, we used a set of androgen receptor deletion mutants to identify the microtubule-binding domain of the androgen receptor, which encompasses the DNA binding domain plus hinge region. We report that two clinically relevant androgen receptor splice variants, ARv567 and ARv7, differentially associate with microtubules and dynein motor protein, thereby resulting in differential taxane sensitivity in vitro and in vivo. ARv7, which lacks the hinge region, did not co-sediment with microtubules or coprecipitate with dynein motor protein, unlike ARv567. Mechanistic investigations revealed that the nuclear accumulation and transcriptional activity of ARv7 was unaffected by taxane treatment. In contrast, the microtubule-interacting splice variant ARv567 was sensitive to taxane-induced microtubule stabilization. In ARv567-expressing LuCap86.2 tumor xenografts, docetaxel treatment was highly efficacious, whereas ARv7-expressing LuCap23.1 tumor xenografts displayed docetaxel resistance. Our results suggest that androgen receptor variants that accumulate in CRPC cells utilize distinct pathways of nuclear import that affect the antitumor efficacy of taxanes, suggesting a mechanistic rationale to customize treatments for patients with CRPC, which might improve outcomes. (C) 2014 AACR.

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