Androgen receptor monomers and dimers regulate opposing biological processes in prostate cancer cells.
Rachid SafiSuzanne E WardellPaige WatkinsonXiaodi QinMarissa LeeSunghee ParkTaylor KrebsEmma L DolanAdam BlattlerToshiya TsujiSurendra NayakMarwa KhaterCelia FontanilloMadeline A NewlinMegan L KirklandYingtian XieHenry W LongEmma C FinkSean W FanningScott RunyonMyles A BrownShuichan XuKouros OwzarJohn D NorrisDonald P McDonnellPublished in: Nature communications (2024)
Most prostate cancers express the androgen receptor (AR), and tumor growth and progression are facilitated by exceptionally low levels of systemic or intratumorally produced androgens. Thus, absolute inhibition of the androgen signaling axis remains the goal of current therapeutic approaches to treat prostate cancer (PCa). Paradoxically, high dose androgens also exhibit considerable efficacy as a treatment modality in patients with late-stage metastatic PCa. Here we show that low levels of androgens, functioning through an AR monomer, facilitate a non-genomic activation of the mTOR signaling pathway to drive proliferation. Conversely, high dose androgens facilitate the formation of AR dimers/oligomers to suppress c-MYC expression, inhibit proliferation and drive a transcriptional program associated with a differentiated phenotype. These findings highlight the inherent liabilities in current approaches used to inhibit AR action in PCa and are instructive as to strategies that can be used to develop new therapeutics for this disease and other androgenopathies.
Keyphrases
- high dose
- prostate cancer
- signaling pathway
- low dose
- stem cell transplantation
- radical prostatectomy
- poor prognosis
- small cell lung cancer
- squamous cell carcinoma
- pi k akt
- gene expression
- transcription factor
- epithelial mesenchymal transition
- cell proliferation
- induced apoptosis
- combination therapy
- copy number
- dna methylation
- oxidative stress
- heat shock
- long non coding rna
- molecularly imprinted
- young adults
- liquid chromatography
- binding protein
- simultaneous determination