Publication | Open Access
Differential Effects of Genistein on Prostate Cancer Cells Depend on Mutational Status of the Androgen Receptor
57
Citations
61
References
2013
Year
Androgen ReceptorGeneticsTranscriptional RegulationDifferential EffectsTranslational BiologyCell SignalingMutational StatusMolecular SignalingMolecular PhysiologyAr ActivityOncogenic AgentHormonal ReceptorAromataseProstatic DiseaseEndocrinologyGene ExpressionEpigenetic RegulationCell BiologyTumor MicroenvironmentEndocrine-related CancerPca Cell ProliferationUrologyNatural SciencesMedicineEndocrine Research
Blocking the androgen receptor (AR) activity is the main goal of therapies for advanced prostate cancer (PCa). However, relapse with a more aggressive, hormone refractory PCa arises, which harbors restored AR activity. One mechanism of such reactivation occurs through acquisition of AR mutations that enable its activation by various steroidal and non-steroidal structures. Thus, natural and chemical compounds that contribute to inappropriate (androgen-independent) activation of the AR become an area of intensive research. Here, we demonstrate that genistein, a soy phytoestrogen binds to both the wild and the Thr877Ala (T877A) mutant types of AR competitively with androgen, nevertheless, it exerts a pleiotropic effect on PCa cell proliferation and AR activity depending on the mutational status of the AR. Genistein inhibited, in a dose-dependent way, cell proliferation and AR nuclear localization and expression in LAPC-4 cells that have wild AR. However, in LNCaP cells that express the T877A mutant AR, genistein induced a biphasic effect where physiological doses (0.5-5 µmol/L) stimulated cell growth and increased AR expression and transcriptional activity, and higher doses induced inhibitory effects. Similar biphasic results were achieved in PC-3 cells transfected with AR mutants; T877A, W741C and H874Y. These findings suggest that genistein, at physiological concentrations, potentially act as an agonist and activate the mutant AR that can be present in advanced PCa after androgen ablation therapy.
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