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An androgen receptor switch underlies lineage infidelity in treatment-resistant prostate cancer.

Alastair DaviesShaghayegh NouruziDwaipayan GanguliTakeshi NamekawaDaksh ThaperSimon LinderFatih KaraoğlanoğluMeltem E OmurSoojin KimMaxim KobelevSahil KumarOlena SivakChiara BostockJennifer BishopMarlous HoogstraatAmina TalalSuzan StellooHenk van der PoelAndries M BergmanMusaddeque AhmedLadan FazliZhenlin HuangWayne D TilleyDavid GoodrichFelix Y FengMartin GleaveHousheng Hansen HeFaraz HachWilbert ZwartHimisha BeltranLuke A SelthAmina Zoubeidi
Published in: Nature cell biology (2021)
Cancers adapt to increasingly potent targeted therapies by reprogramming their phenotype. Here we investigated such a phenomenon in prostate cancer, in which tumours can escape epithelial lineage confinement and transition to a high-plasticity state as an adaptive response to potent androgen receptor (AR) antagonism. We found that AR activity can be maintained as tumours adopt alternative lineage identities, with changes in chromatin architecture guiding AR transcriptional rerouting. The epigenetic regulator enhancer of zeste homologue 2 (EZH2) co-occupies the reprogrammed AR cistrome to transcriptionally modulate stem cell and neuronal gene networks-granting privileges associated with both fates. This function of EZH2 was associated with T350 phosphorylation and establishment of a non-canonical polycomb subcomplex. Our study provides mechanistic insights into the plasticity of the lineage-infidelity state governed by AR reprogramming that enabled us to redirect cell fate by modulating EZH2 and AR, highlighting the clinical potential of reversing resistance phenotypes.
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