4.7 Article

Rapid Induction of Androgen Receptor Splice Variants by Androgen Deprivation in Prostate Cancer

Journal

CLINICAL CANCER RESEARCH
Volume 20, Issue 6, Pages 1590-1600

Publisher

AMER ASSOC CANCER RESEARCH
DOI: 10.1158/1078-0432.CCR-13-1863

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Funding

  1. Department of Defense Prostate Cancer Research Program Postdoctoral Training Award [W81XWH-12-PCRP-PTA]
  2. Idea Development Awards [W81XWH-11-1-0295, W81XWH-08-1-0414, W81XWH07-1-0443]
  3. DF/HCC-Prostate Cancer SPORE [P50 CA090381]
  4. NIH K99 award [CA166507]
  5. NIH [P01 CA163227-01A1]
  6. Prostate Cancer Foundation Challenge Award
  7. PNW Prostate SPORE [P50CA097186, DOD PC093509]

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Purpose: Mechanisms mediating androgen receptor (AR) reactivation in prostate cancer that progresses after castration (castration-resistant prostate cancer; CRPC) and subsequent treatment with abiraterone (CYP17A1 inhibitor that further suppresses androgen synthesis) remain unclear. Experimental Design: Prostate cancer xenografts were examined to identify mechanism of progression after castration and abiraterone. Results: AR reactivation in abiraterone-resistant VCaP xenografts was not associated with restoration of intratumoral androgens or alterations in AR coregulators. In contrast, mRNA encoding full-length AR (AR-FL) and a constitutively active splice variant (AR-V7) were increased compared with xenografts before castration, with an increase in AR-V7 relative to AR-FL. This shift toward AR-V7 was due to a feedback mechanism whereby the androgen-liganded AR stimulates expression of proteins that suppress generation of AR-V7 relative to AR-FL transcripts. However, despite the increases in AR-V7 mRNA, it remained a minor transcript (< 1%) relative to AR-FL in resistant VCaP xenografts and CRPC clinical samples. AR-V7 protein expression was similarly low relative to AR-FL in castration-resistant VCaP xenografts and androgen-deprived VCaP cells, but the weak basal AR activity in these latter cells was further repressed by AR-V7 siRNA. Conclusions: AR-V7 at these low levels is not adequate to restore AR activity, but its rapid induction after androgen deprivation allows tumors to retain basal AR activity that may be needed for survival until more potent mechanisms emerge to activate AR. Agents targeting AR splice variants may be most effective when used very early in conjunction with therapies targeting the AR ligand-binding domain. (C)2014 AACR.

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