Overproduction of variant RNA sequences found in prostate cancer patients who no longer respond to hormone deprivation therapy
The hormone deprivation therapy that prostate cancer
patients often take gives them only a temporary fix, with tumors usually regaining
their hold within a couple of years. Now, researchers at Johns Hopkins have discovered
critical differences in the hormone receptors on prostate cancer cells in patients
who no longer respond to this therapy. The findings, reported in the Jan. 1 issue
of Cancer Research, could lead to a way to track disease progression, as well
as new targets to fight prostate cancer.
Prostate cancer cells rely on androgens to survive and
grow, explains Jun Luo, Ph.D., an assistant professor at Johns Hopkins' James
Buchanan Brady Urological Institute. Since 1941, doctors have taken advantage
of this dependency to battle prostate cancer by depriving patients of androgens,
either by castration or chemical methods. For most patients, this hormone deprivation
therapy causes tumors to shrink, sometimes dramatically. However, it's never a
cure-tumors eventually regrow into a stronger form, becoming resistant to this
and other forms of treatment.
Seeking the reason why this therapy eventually fails,
Luo and his colleagues at the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, the
University of Washington and Puget Sound VA Medical Center looked to a key player:
the androgen receptors on prostate cancer cells.
Using a large database, the researchers searched for
variations of the nucleic acid RNA that prostate cells use to create androgen
receptors, eventually identifying seven RNA sequences different from the "normal"
androgen receptor already known to scientists. When they looked for these sequences
in cells isolated from 124 prostate cancer patients, they found over-production
of these outlaw variants in prostate cancer cells taken from patients whose disease
had become resistant to hormone deprivation therapy. One variation?known as AR-V7,
was also prevalent in a select group of patients who had never taken hormone therapy,
but whose cancer aggressively regrew after surgery to remove their tumors.
To see how androgen receptors made from AR-V7 differ
from others, the researchers forced lab-grown prostate cancer cells to produce
only the AR-V7 sequence. Unlike cells with other androgen receptors, those with
only AR-V7 receptors acted as if they were continually receiving androgens-turning
on at least 20 genes that rely on androgens for activation?even though no androgens
were present.
The results suggest that hormone therapy might encourage
prostate cancer cells to overproduce the AR-V7 receptors over time, leading them
to survive and grow aggressively even without androgens, explains Luo. In some
patients, he adds, AR-V7 receptors might already be prevalent even without hormone
therapy, predisposing them to an already-aggressive form of prostate cancer that
won't respond as well to hormone deprivation therapy.
"We may eventually be able to develop an assay to test
for this androgen receptor variant, giving us a way to test which patients are
good candidates for hormone deprivation therapy and providing a way to monitor
disease progression in patients already on this therapy," Luo says.
Examining the differences between AR-V7 and other androgen
receptor variants may also provide researchers with new ideas to develop prostate
cancer-fighting pharmaceuticals, he adds.
Other researchers who contributed to this study include
Rong Hu, Thomas A. Dunn, Shuanzeng Wei, Sumit Isharwal, Robert W. Veltri, Elizabeth
Humphreys, Misop Han, Alan W. Partin, William B. Isaacs and G. Steven Bova, all
of the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine; and Robert L. Vessella of
the University of Washington and Puget Sound VA Medical Center.
This research was funded by a grant from the David H.
Koch Foundation.
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