Inhibition of Wnt/β-catenin pathway overcomes therapeutic resistance to abiraterone in castration-resistant prostate cancer.
Ibrahim M AtawiaPrem P KushwahaShiv VermaSpencer LinEswar ShankarOsama Abdel-GawadSanjay GuptaPublished in: Molecular carcinogenesis (2023)
Abiraterone acetate has been clinically approved for the treatment of patients with advanced-stage prostate cancer. It reduces testosterone production by blocking the enzyme cytochrome P450 17 alpha-hydroxylase. Despite improved survival outcomes with abiraterone, almost all patients develop therapeutic resistance and disease recurrence, progressing to a more aggressive and lethal phenotype. Bioinformatics analyses predicted activation of canonical Wnt/β-catenin and involvement of stem cell plasticity in abiraterone-resistant prostate cancer. Increased expression of androgen receptor (AR) and β-catenin and their crosstalk causes activation of AR target genes and regulatory networks for which overcoming acquired resistance remains a major challenge. Here we show that co-treatment with abiraterone and ICG001, a β-catenin inhibitor, overcomes therapeutic resistance and significantly inhibited markers of stem cell and cellular proliferation in abiraterone-resistant prostate cancer cells. Importantly, this combined treatment abrogated the association between AR and β-catenin; diminished SOX9 expression from the complex more prominently in abiraterone-resistant cells. In addition, combined treatment inhibited tumor growth in an in vivo abiraterone-resistant xenograft model, blocked stemness, migration, invasion, and colony formation ability of cancer cells. This study opens new therapeutic opportunity for advanced-stage castration-resistant prostate cancer patients.
Keyphrases
- stem cells
- prostate cancer
- cell proliferation
- epithelial mesenchymal transition
- end stage renal disease
- newly diagnosed
- ejection fraction
- poor prognosis
- transcription factor
- radical prostatectomy
- chronic kidney disease
- induced apoptosis
- replacement therapy
- cell death
- long non coding rna
- prognostic factors
- peritoneal dialysis
- cell cycle arrest
- free survival
- smoking cessation
- gene expression