RESUMO
BACKGROUND: Although the fusion of the transmembrane serine protease 2 gene (TMPRSS2) with the erythroblast transformation-specific-related gene (ERG), or TMPRSS2-ERG, occurs frequently in prostate cancer, its impact on clinical outcomes remains controversial. Roughly half of TMPRSS2-ERG fusions occur through intrachromosomal deletion of interstitial genes and the remainder via insertional chromosomal rearrangements. Because prostate cancers with deletion-derived TMPRSS2-ERG fusions are more aggressive than those with insertional fusions, we investigated the impact of interstitial gene loss on prostate cancer progression. METHODS: We conducted an unbiased analysis of transcriptome data from large collections of prostate cancer samples and employed diverse in vitro and in vivo models combined with genetic approaches to characterize the interstitial gene loss that imposes the most important impact on clinical outcome. RESULTS: This analysis identified FAM3B as the top-ranked interstitial gene whose loss is associated with a poor prognosis. The association between FAM3B loss and poor clinical outcome extended to fusion-negative prostate cancers where FAM3B downregulation occurred through epigenetic imprinting. Importantly, FAM3B loss drives disease progression in prostate cancer. FAM3B acts as an intermediator of a self-governing androgen receptor feedback loop. Specifically, androgen receptor upregulates FAM3B expression by binding to an intronic enhancer to induce an enhancer RNA and facilitate enhancer-promoter looping. FAM3B, in turn, attenuates androgen receptor signaling. CONCLUSION: Loss of FAM3B in prostate cancer, whether through the TMPRSS2-ERG translocation or epigenetic imprinting, causes an exit from this autoregulatory loop to unleash androgen receptor activity and prostate cancer progression. These findings establish FAM3B loss as a new driver of prostate cancer progression and support the utility of FAM3B loss as a biomarker to better define aggressive prostate cancer.
Assuntos
Neoplasias da Próstata , Receptores Androgênicos , Masculino , Humanos , Receptores Androgênicos/genética , Retroalimentação , Neoplasias da Próstata/genética , Neoplasias da Próstata/metabolismo , Transcriptoma , Proteínas de Fusão Oncogênica/genética , Regulador Transcricional ERG/genética , Regulador Transcricional ERG/metabolismo , Proteínas de Neoplasias/genética , Citocinas/genéticaRESUMO
These data include secondary analysis of publicly available RNA-seq data from castration-resistant prostate cancer (CRPC) patients as well as RT-qPCR and Western blotting analyses of patient-derived xenograft models and a CRPC cell line. We applied Spearman correlation analysis to assess the relationship between canonical androgen receptor (AR) splicing and alternative AR splicing. We also assessed the ratio of AR splice variants (AR-Vs) to the full-length AR (AR-FL) at the RNA and protein levels by absolute RT-qPCR and Western blotting, respectively. These data are critical for studying the mechanisms underlying upregulated expression of AR-Vs after AR-directed therapies and the importance of AR-Vs to castration-resistant progression of prostate cancer. Data presented here are related to the research article by Ma et al., "Increased transcription and high translation efficiency lead to accumulation of androgen receptor splice variant after androgen deprivation therapy", Cancer Lett. In Press [1].
RESUMO
Upregulation of androgen receptor splice variants (AR-Vs), especially AR-V7, is associated with castration resistance of prostate cancer. At the RNA level, AR-V7 upregulation is generally coupled with increased full-length AR (AR-FL); consequently, AR-V7 and AR-Vs collectively constitute a minority of the AR population. However, Western blotting showed that the relative abundance of AR-V proteins is much higher in many castration-resistant prostate cancers (CRPCs). To address the mechanism underlying this discrepancy, we analyzed RNA-seq data from ~350 CRPC samples and found a positive correlation between all canonical and alternative AR splicing. This indicates that increased alternative splicing is not at the expense of canonical splicing. Instead, androgen deprivation releases AR-FL from repressing the transcription of the AR gene to induce coordinated increase of AR-FL and AR-V mRNAs. At the protein level, however, androgen deprivation induces AR-FL, but not AR-V, degradation. Moreover, AR-V7 is translated much faster than AR-FL. Thus, androgen-deprivation-induced AR-gene transcription and AR-FL protein decay, together with efficient AR-V7 translation, explain the discrepancy between the relative AR-V mRNA and protein abundances in many CRPCs, highlighting the inevitability of AR-V induction after endocrine therapy.