ONECUT2 is a driver of neuroendocrine prostate cancer

Haiyang Guo(University Health Network), Xinpei Ci(University of British Columbia), Musaddeque Ahmed(University Health Network), Junjie T. Hua(University Health Network), Fraser Soares(University Health Network), Dong Lin(University of British Columbia), Loredana Puca(Cornell University), Aram Vosoughi(Cornell University), Hui Xue(University of British Columbia), Estelle Li(University of British Columbia), Peiran Su(University Health Network), Sujun Chen(University Health Network), Tran Nguyen(University Health Network), Yi Liang(University Health Network), Yuzhe Zhang(University Health Network), Xin Xu(University Health Network), Jing Xu(University Health Network), Anjali V. Sheahan(Dana-Farber Cancer Institute), Wail Ba-Alawi(University Health Network), Si Zhang, Osman Mahamud(University Health Network), Ravi N. Vellanki(University Health Network), Martin Gleave(University of British Columbia), Robert G. Bristow(University Health Network), Benjamin Haibe‐Kains(Ontario Institute for Cancer Research), John T. Poirier(Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center), Charles M. Rudin(Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center), Ming‐Sound Tsao(University Health Network), Bradly G. Wouters(University Health Network), Ladan Fazli(University of British Columbia), Felix Y. Feng(University of California, San Francisco), Leigh Ellis(Broad Institute), Theodorus van der Kwast(University Health Network), Alejandro Berlín(University Health Network), Marianne Koritzinsky(University Health Network), Paul C. Boutros(Ontario Institute for Cancer Research), Amina Zoubeidi(University of British Columbia), Himisha Beltran(Cornell University), Yuzhuo Wang(Vancouver General Hospital), Housheng Hansen He(University of Toronto)
Nature Communications
January 11, 2019
Cited by 241Open Access
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Abstract

Neuroendocrine prostate cancer (NEPC), a lethal form of the disease, is characterized by loss of androgen receptor (AR) signaling during neuroendocrine transdifferentiation, which results in resistance to AR-targeted therapy. Clinically, genomically and epigenetically, NEPC resembles other types of poorly differentiated neuroendocrine tumors (NETs). Through pan-NET analyses, we identified ONECUT2 as a candidate master transcriptional regulator of poorly differentiated NETs. ONECUT2 ectopic expression in prostate adenocarcinoma synergizes with hypoxia to suppress androgen signaling and induce neuroendocrine plasticity. ONEUCT2 drives tumor aggressiveness in NEPC, partially through regulating hypoxia signaling and tumor hypoxia. Specifically, ONECUT2 activates SMAD3, which regulates hypoxia signaling through modulating HIF1α chromatin-binding, leading NEPC to exhibit higher degrees of hypoxia compared to prostate adenocarcinomas. Treatment with hypoxia-activated prodrug TH-302 potently reduces NEPC tumor growth. Collectively, these results highlight the synergy between ONECUT2 and hypoxia in driving NEPC, and emphasize the potential of hypoxia-directed therapy for NEPC patients.


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