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New therapy targeting differential androgen receptor signaling in prostate cancer stem/progenitor vs. non-stem/progenitor cells

  • Soo Ok Lee
  • , Zhifang Ma
  • , Chiuan Ren Yeh
  • , Jie Luo
  • , Tzu Hua Lin
  • , Kuo Pao Lai
  • , Shinichi Yamashita
  • , Liang Liang
  • , Jing Tian
  • , Lei Li
  • , Qi Jiang
  • , Chiung Kuei Huang
  • , Yuanjie Niu
  • , Shuyuan Yeh
  • , Chawnshang Chang
  • University of Rochester
  • Shanxi Medical University
  • First Affiliated Hospital of xi'An Jiaotong University
  • Tianjin Medical University
  • China Medical University Taichung

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

84 Scopus citations

Abstract

The androgen deprivation therapy (ADT) to systematically suppress/reduce androgens binding to the androgen receptor (AR) has been the standard therapy for prostate cancer (PCa); yet, most of ADT eventually fails leading to the recurrence of castration resistant PCa. Here, we found that the PCa patients who received ADT had increased PCa stem/progenitor cell population. The addition of the anti-androgen, Casodex®, or AR-siRNA in various PCa cells led to increased stem/progenitor cells, whereas, in contrast, the addition of functional AR led to decreased stem/progenitor cell population but increased non-stem/progenitor cell population, suggesting that AR functions differentially in PCa stem/progenitor vs. non-stem/progenitor cells. Therefore, the current ADT might result in an undesired expansion of PCa stem/progenitor cell population, which explains why this therapy fails. Using various human PCa cell lines and three different mouse models, we concluded that targeting PCa non-stem/progenitor cells with AR degradation enhancer ASC-J9® and targeting PCa stem/progenitor cells with 5-azathioprine and γ-tocotrienol resulted in a significant suppression of the tumors at the castration resistant stage. This suggests that a combinational therapy that simultaneously targets both stem/progenitor and non-stem/progenitor cells will lead to better therapeutic efficacy and may become a new therapy to battle the PCa before and after castration resistant stages.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)14-26
Number of pages13
JournalJournal of molecular cell biology
Volume5
Issue number1
DOIs
StatePublished - Feb 2013

Keywords

  • androgen receptor
  • combination therapy
  • prostate cancer stem cells

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