Cargando…

Cell-cycle coupled expansion of AR activity promotes cancer progression

The androgen receptor (AR) is required for prostate cancer (PCa) survival and progression, and ablation of AR activity is the first line of therapeutic intervention for disseminated disease. While initially effective, recurrent tumors ultimately arise for which there is no durable cure. Despite the...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: McNair, Christopher, Urbanucci, Alfonso, Comstock, Clay E.S., Augello, Michael A., Goodwin, Jonathan F., Launchbury, Rosalind, Zhao, Shuang, Schiewer, Mathew J., Ertel, Adam, Karnes, Jeffrey, Davicioni, Elai, Wang, Liguo, Wang, Qianben, Mills, Ian G., Feng, Felix Y., Li, Wei, Carroll, Jason S., Knudsen, Karen E.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: 2016
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5364060/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/27669432
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/onc.2016.334
_version_ 1782517253166596096
author McNair, Christopher
Urbanucci, Alfonso
Comstock, Clay E.S.
Augello, Michael A.
Goodwin, Jonathan F.
Launchbury, Rosalind
Zhao, Shuang
Schiewer, Mathew J.
Ertel, Adam
Karnes, Jeffrey
Davicioni, Elai
Wang, Liguo
Wang, Qianben
Mills, Ian G.
Feng, Felix Y.
Li, Wei
Carroll, Jason S.
Knudsen, Karen E.
author_facet McNair, Christopher
Urbanucci, Alfonso
Comstock, Clay E.S.
Augello, Michael A.
Goodwin, Jonathan F.
Launchbury, Rosalind
Zhao, Shuang
Schiewer, Mathew J.
Ertel, Adam
Karnes, Jeffrey
Davicioni, Elai
Wang, Liguo
Wang, Qianben
Mills, Ian G.
Feng, Felix Y.
Li, Wei
Carroll, Jason S.
Knudsen, Karen E.
author_sort McNair, Christopher
collection PubMed
description The androgen receptor (AR) is required for prostate cancer (PCa) survival and progression, and ablation of AR activity is the first line of therapeutic intervention for disseminated disease. While initially effective, recurrent tumors ultimately arise for which there is no durable cure. Despite the dependence of PCa on AR activity throughout the course of disease, delineation of the AR-dependent transcriptional network that governs disease progression remains elusive, and the function of AR in mitotically active cells is not well understood. Analyzing AR activity as a function of cell cycle revealed an unexpected and highly expanded repertoire of AR-regulated gene networks in actively cycling cells. New AR functions segregated into two major clusters: those that are specific to cycling cells and retained throughout the mitotic cell cycle (“Cell Cycle Common”), versus those that were specifically enriched in a subset of cell cycle phases (“Phase Restricted”). Further analyses identified previously unrecognized AR functions in major pathways associated with clinical PCa progression. Illustrating the impact of these unmasked AR-driven pathways, dihydroceramide-desaturase 1 (DEGS1) was identified as an AR regulated gene in mitotically active cells that promoted pro-metastatic phenotypes, and in advanced PCa proved to be highly associated with development of metastases, recurrence after therapeutic intervention, and reduced overall survival. Taken together, these findings delineate AR function in mitotically active tumor cells, thus providing critical insight into the molecular basis by which AR promotes development of lethal PCa and nominate new avenues for therapeutic intervention.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-5364060
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2016
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-53640602017-03-26 Cell-cycle coupled expansion of AR activity promotes cancer progression McNair, Christopher Urbanucci, Alfonso Comstock, Clay E.S. Augello, Michael A. Goodwin, Jonathan F. Launchbury, Rosalind Zhao, Shuang Schiewer, Mathew J. Ertel, Adam Karnes, Jeffrey Davicioni, Elai Wang, Liguo Wang, Qianben Mills, Ian G. Feng, Felix Y. Li, Wei Carroll, Jason S. Knudsen, Karen E. Oncogene Article The androgen receptor (AR) is required for prostate cancer (PCa) survival and progression, and ablation of AR activity is the first line of therapeutic intervention for disseminated disease. While initially effective, recurrent tumors ultimately arise for which there is no durable cure. Despite the dependence of PCa on AR activity throughout the course of disease, delineation of the AR-dependent transcriptional network that governs disease progression remains elusive, and the function of AR in mitotically active cells is not well understood. Analyzing AR activity as a function of cell cycle revealed an unexpected and highly expanded repertoire of AR-regulated gene networks in actively cycling cells. New AR functions segregated into two major clusters: those that are specific to cycling cells and retained throughout the mitotic cell cycle (“Cell Cycle Common”), versus those that were specifically enriched in a subset of cell cycle phases (“Phase Restricted”). Further analyses identified previously unrecognized AR functions in major pathways associated with clinical PCa progression. Illustrating the impact of these unmasked AR-driven pathways, dihydroceramide-desaturase 1 (DEGS1) was identified as an AR regulated gene in mitotically active cells that promoted pro-metastatic phenotypes, and in advanced PCa proved to be highly associated with development of metastases, recurrence after therapeutic intervention, and reduced overall survival. Taken together, these findings delineate AR function in mitotically active tumor cells, thus providing critical insight into the molecular basis by which AR promotes development of lethal PCa and nominate new avenues for therapeutic intervention. 2016-09-26 2017-03-23 /pmc/articles/PMC5364060/ /pubmed/27669432 http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/onc.2016.334 Text en Users may view, print, copy, and download text and data-mine the content in such documents, for the purposes of academic research, subject always to the full Conditions of use: http://www.nature.com/authors/editorial_policies/license.html#terms
spellingShingle Article
McNair, Christopher
Urbanucci, Alfonso
Comstock, Clay E.S.
Augello, Michael A.
Goodwin, Jonathan F.
Launchbury, Rosalind
Zhao, Shuang
Schiewer, Mathew J.
Ertel, Adam
Karnes, Jeffrey
Davicioni, Elai
Wang, Liguo
Wang, Qianben
Mills, Ian G.
Feng, Felix Y.
Li, Wei
Carroll, Jason S.
Knudsen, Karen E.
Cell-cycle coupled expansion of AR activity promotes cancer progression
title Cell-cycle coupled expansion of AR activity promotes cancer progression
title_full Cell-cycle coupled expansion of AR activity promotes cancer progression
title_fullStr Cell-cycle coupled expansion of AR activity promotes cancer progression
title_full_unstemmed Cell-cycle coupled expansion of AR activity promotes cancer progression
title_short Cell-cycle coupled expansion of AR activity promotes cancer progression
title_sort cell-cycle coupled expansion of ar activity promotes cancer progression
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5364060/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/27669432
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/onc.2016.334
work_keys_str_mv AT mcnairchristopher cellcyclecoupledexpansionofaractivitypromotescancerprogression
AT urbanuccialfonso cellcyclecoupledexpansionofaractivitypromotescancerprogression
AT comstockclayes cellcyclecoupledexpansionofaractivitypromotescancerprogression
AT augellomichaela cellcyclecoupledexpansionofaractivitypromotescancerprogression
AT goodwinjonathanf cellcyclecoupledexpansionofaractivitypromotescancerprogression
AT launchburyrosalind cellcyclecoupledexpansionofaractivitypromotescancerprogression
AT zhaoshuang cellcyclecoupledexpansionofaractivitypromotescancerprogression
AT schiewermathewj cellcyclecoupledexpansionofaractivitypromotescancerprogression
AT erteladam cellcyclecoupledexpansionofaractivitypromotescancerprogression
AT karnesjeffrey cellcyclecoupledexpansionofaractivitypromotescancerprogression
AT davicionielai cellcyclecoupledexpansionofaractivitypromotescancerprogression
AT wangliguo cellcyclecoupledexpansionofaractivitypromotescancerprogression
AT wangqianben cellcyclecoupledexpansionofaractivitypromotescancerprogression
AT millsiang cellcyclecoupledexpansionofaractivitypromotescancerprogression
AT fengfelixy cellcyclecoupledexpansionofaractivitypromotescancerprogression
AT liwei cellcyclecoupledexpansionofaractivitypromotescancerprogression
AT carrolljasons cellcyclecoupledexpansionofaractivitypromotescancerprogression
AT knudsenkarene cellcyclecoupledexpansionofaractivitypromotescancerprogression