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The Proteogenomics of Prostate Cancer Radioresistance.

Roni HaasGavin FrameShahbaz KhanBeth K NeilsenBoon Hao HongCelestia P X YeoTakafumi N YamaguchiEnya H W OngWenyan ZhaoBenjamin CarlinEugenia L L YeoKah M TanYuan Zhe BughChenghao ZhuRupert Hugh-WhiteJulie LivingstoneDennis J J PoonPek L ChuYash PatelShu TaoVladimir IgnatchenkoNatalie J KurganovsGeoff S HigginsMichelle R DownesAndrew LoblawDanny VespriniAmar U KishanMatthew Chin Heng ChuaThomas KislingerPaul C BoutrosStanley K Liu
Published in: Cancer research communications (2024)
Prostate cancer is frequently treated with radiotherapy. Unfortunately, aggressive radioresistant relapses can arise, and the molecular underpinnings of radioresistance are unknown. Modern clinical radiotherapy is evolving to deliver higher doses of radiation in fewer fractions (hypofractionation). We therefore analyzed genomic, transcriptomic and proteomic data to characterize prostate cancer radioresistance in cells treated with both conventionally fractionated and hypofractionated radiotherapy. Independent of fractionation schedule, resistance to radiotherapy involved massive genomic instability and abrogation of DNA mismatch repair. Specific prostate cancer driver genes were modulated at the RNA and protein levels, with distinct protein subcellular responses to radiotherapy. Conventional fractionation led to a far more aggressive biomolecular response than hypofractionation. Testing pre-clinical candidates identified in cell lines, we revealed POLQ (DNA Polymerase Theta) as a radiosensitizer. POLQ-modulated radioresistance in model systems and was predictive of it in large patient cohorts. The molecular response to radiation is highly multi-modal, and sheds light on prostate cancer lethality.
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