Exploiting AR-regulated drug transport to induce sensitivity to the survivin inhibitor YM155

MD Nyquist, A Corella, J Burns, I Coleman, S Gao… - Molecular Cancer …, 2017 - AACR
MD Nyquist, A Corella, J Burns, I Coleman, S Gao, R Tharakan, L Riggan, C Cai, E Corey
Molecular Cancer Research, 2017AACR
Androgen receptor (AR) signaling is fundamental to prostate cancer and is the dominant
therapeutic target in metastatic disease. However, stringent androgen deprivation therapy
regimens decrease quality of life and have been largely unsuccessful in curtailing mortality.
Recent clinical and preclinical studies have taken advantage of the dichotomous ability of
AR signaling to elicit growth-suppressive and differentiating effects by administering
hyperphysiologic levels of testosterone. In this study, high-throughput drug screening …
Abstract
Androgen receptor (AR) signaling is fundamental to prostate cancer and is the dominant therapeutic target in metastatic disease. However, stringent androgen deprivation therapy regimens decrease quality of life and have been largely unsuccessful in curtailing mortality. Recent clinical and preclinical studies have taken advantage of the dichotomous ability of AR signaling to elicit growth-suppressive and differentiating effects by administering hyperphysiologic levels of testosterone. In this study, high-throughput drug screening identified a potent synergy between high-androgen therapy and YM155, a transcriptional inhibitor of survivin (BIRC5). This interaction was mediated by the direct transcriptional upregulation of the YM155 transporter SLC35F2 by the AR. Androgen-mediated YM155-induced cell death was completely blocked by the overexpression of multidrug resistance transporter ABCB1. SLC35F2 expression was significantly correlated with intratumor androgen levels in four distinct patient-derived xenograft models, and with AR activity score in a large gene expression dataset of castration-resistant metastases. A subset of tumors had significantly elevated SLC35F2 expression and, therefore, may identify patients who are highly responsive to YM155 treatment.
Implications: The combination of androgen therapy with YM155 represents a novel drug synergy, and SLC35F2 may serve as a clinical biomarker of response to YM155. Mol Cancer Res; 15(5); 521–31. ©2017 AACR.
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