GATA2 facilitates steroid receptor coactivator recruitment to the androgen receptor complex

Bin He(Baylor College of Medicine), Rainer B. Lanz(Baylor College of Medicine), Warren Fiskus(Institut de Biologie Moléculaire et Cellulaire), Chuandong Geng(Baylor College of Medicine), Ping Yi(Baylor College of Medicine), Sean M. Hartig(Baylor College of Medicine), Kimal Rajapakshe(Baylor College of Medicine), John Shou(Baylor College of Medicine), Liping Wei(Baylor College of Medicine), Shrijal S. Shah(Baylor College of Medicine), Christopher Foley(Baylor College of Medicine), Sue Anne Chew(Baylor College of Medicine), Vijay Kumar Eedunuri, Diego Bedoya(Baylor College of Medicine), Qin Feng(Baylor College of Medicine), Takashi Minami(The University of Tokyo), Constantine S. Mitsiades(Dana-Farber Cancer Institute), Anna Frolov(Baylor College of Medicine), Nancy L. Weigel(Baylor College of Medicine), Susan G. Hilsenbeck(Baylor College of Medicine), Daniel Rosen(Michael E. DeBakey VA Medical Center), Timothy Palzkill(Baylor College of Medicine), Michael Ittmann(Michael E. DeBakey VA Medical Center), Yongcheng Song(Baylor College of Medicine), Cristian Coarfa(Baylor College of Medicine), Bert W. O’Malley(Baylor College of Medicine), Nicholas Mitsiades(Baylor College of Medicine)
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
December 8, 2014
Cited by 128Open Access
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Abstract

The androgen receptor (AR) is a key driver of prostate cancer (PC), even in the state of castration-resistant PC (CRPC) and frequently even after treatment with second-line hormonal therapies such as abiraterone and enzalutamide. The persistence of AR activity via both ligand-dependent and ligand-independent mechanisms (including constitutively active AR splice variants) highlights the unmet need for alternative approaches to block AR signaling in CRPC. We investigated the transcription factor GATA-binding protein 2 (GATA2) as a regulator of AR signaling and an actionable therapeutic target in PC. We demonstrate that GATA2 directly promotes expression of both full-length and splice-variant AR, resulting in a strong positive correlation between GATA2 and AR expression in both PC cell lines and patient specimens. Conversely, GATA2 expression is repressed by androgen and AR, suggesting a negative feedback regulatory loop that, upon androgen deprivation, derepresses GATA2 to contribute to AR overexpression in CRPC. Simultaneously, GATA2 is necessary for optimal transcriptional activity of both full-length and splice-variant AR. GATA2 colocalizes with AR and Forkhead box protein A1 on chromatin to enhance recruitment of steroid receptor coactivators and formation of the transcriptional holocomplex. In agreement with these important functions, high GATA2 expression and transcriptional activity predicted worse clinical outcome in PC patients. A GATA2 small molecule inhibitor suppressed the expression and transcriptional function of both full-length and splice-variant AR and exerted potent anticancer activity against PC cell lines. We propose pharmacological inhibition of GATA2 as a first-in-field approach to target AR expression and function and improve outcomes in CRPC.


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