Publication | Open Access
Antagonistic Functions of Androgen Receptor and NF-κB in Prostate Cancer—Experimental and Computational Analyses
14
Citations
45
References
2022
Year
Androgen ReceptorImmunologyCancer BiologyTumor BiologyTranscriptional RegulationSignaling PathwayCancer Cell BiologyProstate Epithelial CellsRadiation OncologyCell SignalingCancer ResearchMolecular OncologyMolecular SignalingProstate Cancer—experimentalHormonal ReceptorImmune SurveillanceAntagonistic FunctionsProstatic DiseaseCell BiologyEndocrine-related CancerUrologyCancer GenomicsTumor SuppressorSystems BiologyMedicine
Prostate cancer is very frequent and is, in many countries, the third-leading cause of cancer related death in men. While early diagnosis and treatment by surgical removal is often curative, metastasizing prostate cancer has a very bad prognosis. Based on the androgen-dependence of prostate epithelial cells, the standard treatment is blockade of the androgen receptor (AR). However, nearly all patients suffer from a tumor relapse as the metastasizing cells become AR-independent. In our study we show a counter-regulatory link between AR and NF-κB both in human cells and in mouse models of prostate cancer, implying that inhibition of AR signaling results in induction of NF-κB-dependent inflammatory pathways, which may even foster the survival of metastasizing cells. This could be shown by reporter gene assays, DNA-binding measurements, and immune-fluorescence microscopy, and furthermore by a whole set of computational methods using a variety of datasets. Interestingly, loss of PTEN, a frequent genetic alteration in prostate cancer, also causes an upregulation of NF-κB and inflammatory activity. Finally, we present a mathematical model of a dynamic network between AR, NF-κB/IκB, PI3K/PTEN, and the oncogene c-Myc, which indicates that AR blockade may upregulate c-Myc together with NF-κB, and that combined anti-AR/anti-NF-κB and anti-PI3K treatment might be beneficial.
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