Login / Signup

p300/CBP degradation is required to disable the active AR enhanceosome in prostate cancer.

Jie LuoZhixiang ChenYuanyuan QiaoJean Ching-Yi TienEleanor YoungRahul MannanSomnath MahapatraTongchen HeSanjana EyunniYuping ZhangYang ZhengFengyun SuXuhong CaoRui WangYunhui ChengRithvik SeriJames GeorgeMiriam ShahineStephanie J MinerUlka VaishampayanMi WangShaomeng WangAbhijit ParoliaArul M Chinnaiyan
Published in: bioRxiv : the preprint server for biology (2024)
Prostate cancer is an exemplar of an enhancer-binding transcription factor-driven disease. The androgen receptor (AR) enhanceosome complex comprised of chromatin and epigenetic coregulators assembles at enhancer elements to drive disease progression. The paralog lysine acetyltransferases p300 and CBP deposit histone marks that are associated with enhancer activation. Here, we demonstrate that p300/CBP are determinant cofactors of the active AR enhanceosome in prostate cancer. Histone H2B N-terminus multisite lysine acetylation (H2BNTac), which was exclusively reliant on p300/CBP catalytic function, marked active enhancers and was notably elevated in prostate cancer lesions relative to the adjacent benign epithelia. Degradation of p300/CBP rapidly depleted acetylation marks associated with the active AR enhanceosome, which was only partially phenocopied by inhibition of their reader bromodomains. Notably, H2BNTac was effectively abrogated only upon p300/CBP degradation, which led to a stronger suppression of p300/CBP-dependent oncogenic gene programs relative to bromodomain inhibition. In vivo experiments using a novel, orally active p300/CBP proteolysis targeting chimera (PROTAC) degrader (CBPD-409) showed that p300/CBP degradation potently inhibited tumor growth in preclinical models of castration-resistant prostate cancer and synergized with AR antagonists. While mouse p300/CBP orthologs were effectively degraded in host tissues, prolonged treatment with the PROTAC degrader was well tolerated with no significant signs of toxicity. Taken together, our study highlights the pivotal role of p300/CBP in maintaining the active AR enhanceosome and demonstrates how target degradation may have functionally distinct effects relative to target inhibition, thus supporting the development of p300/CBP degraders for the treatment of advanced prostate cancer.
Keyphrases
  • prostate cancer
  • transcription factor
  • radical prostatectomy
  • gene expression
  • dna methylation
  • stem cells
  • public health
  • dna binding
  • oxidative stress
  • smoking cessation