Macrophages promote anti-androgen resistance in prostate cancer bone disease.
Xue-Feng LiCigdem SelliHan-Lin ZhouJian CaoShuiqing WuRuo-Yu MaYe LuCheng-Bin ZhangBijie XunAlyson D LamXiao-Cong PangAnu FernandoZeda ZhangAsier Unciti-BrocetaNeil O CarragherPrakash RamachandranNeil Cowan HendersonLing-Ling SunHai-Yan HuGui-Bo LiCharles L SawyersBin-Zhi QianPublished in: The Journal of experimental medicine (2023)
Metastatic castration-resistant prostate cancer (PC) is the final stage of PC that acquires resistance to androgen deprivation therapies (ADT). Despite progresses in understanding of disease mechanisms, the specific contribution of the metastatic microenvironment to ADT resistance remains largely unknown. The current study identified that the macrophage is the major microenvironmental component of bone-metastatic PC in patients. Using a novel in vivo model, we demonstrated that macrophages were critical for enzalutamide resistance through induction of a wound-healing-like response of ECM-receptor gene expression. Mechanistically, macrophages drove resistance through cytokine activin A that induced fibronectin (FN1)-integrin alpha 5 (ITGA5)-tyrosine kinase Src (SRC) signaling cascade in PC cells. This novel mechanism was strongly supported by bioinformatics analysis of patient transcriptomics datasets. Furthermore, macrophage depletion or SRC inhibition using a novel specific inhibitor significantly inhibited resistant growth. Together, our findings elucidated a novel mechanism of macrophage-induced anti-androgen resistance of metastatic PC and a promising therapeutic approach to treat this deadly disease.