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Activation of β-Catenin Cooperates with Loss of Pten to Drive AR-Independent Castration-Resistant Prostate Cancer.

Rachana PatelElspeth A BrzezinskaPeter RepiscakOwen J SansomErnest MuiMeiling GaoArnaud BlommeVictoria HarleEe Hong TanGaurav MalviyaAgata MrowinskaCarolyn J LoveridgeLinda K RushworthJoanne EdwardsChara NtalaColin NixonAnn HedleyGillian MackaySaverio TarditoOwen J SansomHing Y Leung
Published in: Cancer research (2019)
Inhibition of the androgen receptor (AR) is the main strategy to treat advanced prostate cancers. AR-independent treatment-resistant prostate cancer is a major unresolved clinical problem. Patients with prostate cancer with alterations in canonical WNT pathway genes, which lead to β-catenin activation, are refractory to AR-targeted therapies. Here, using clinically relevant murine prostate cancer models, we investigated the significance of β-catenin activation in prostate cancer progression and treatment resistance. β-Catenin activation, independent of the cell of origin, cooperated with Pten loss to drive AR-independent castration-resistant prostate cancer. Prostate tumors with β-catenin activation relied on the noncanonical WNT ligand WNT5a for sustained growth. WNT5a repressed AR expression and maintained the expression of c-Myc, an oncogenic effector of β-catenin activation, by mediating nuclear localization of NFκBp65 and β-catenin. Overall, WNT/β-catenin and AR signaling are reciprocally inhibited. Therefore, inhibiting WNT/β-catenin signaling by limiting WNT secretion in concert with AR inhibition may be useful for treating prostate cancers with alterations in WNT pathway genes. SIGNIFICANCE: Targeting of both AR and WNT/β-catenin signaling may be required to treat prostate cancers that exhibit alterations of the WNT pathway.
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