N-Myc–mediated epigenetic reprogramming drives lineage plasticity in advanced prostate cancer

Adeline Berger, Nicholas J. Brady, Rohan Bareja(Lander Institute), Brian Robinson(Lander Institute), Vincenza Conteduca, Michael A. Augello, Loredana Puca, Adnan Ahmed(Cornell University), Étienne Dardenne, Xiaodong Lü(Northwestern University), Inah Hwang, Alyssa Bagadion, Andrea Sboner(Cornell University), Olivier Elemento(Cornell University), Jihye Paik(Cornell University), Jindan Yu(Northwestern University), Christopher E. Barbieri(Cornell University), Noah Dephoure(Cornell University), Himisha Beltran(Lander Institute), David S. Rickman(Cornell University)
Journal of Clinical Investigation
July 1, 2019
Cited by 196Open Access
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Abstract

Despite recent therapeutic advances, prostate cancer remains a leading cause of cancer-related death. A subset of castration resistant prostate cancers become androgen receptor (AR) signaling-independent and develop neuroendocrine prostate cancer (NEPC) features through lineage plasticity. These NEPC tumors, associated with aggressive disease and poor prognosis, are driven, in part, by aberrant expression of N-Myc, through mechanisms that remain unclear. Integrative analysis of the N-Myc transcriptome, cistrome and interactome using in vivo, in vitro and ex vivo models (including patient-derived organoids) identified a lineage switch towards a neural identity associated with epigenetic reprogramming. N-Myc and known AR-co-factors (e.g., FOXA1 and HOXB13) overlapped, independently of AR, at genomic loci implicated in neural lineage specification. Moreover, histone marks specifically associated with lineage-defining genes were reprogrammed by N-Myc. We also demonstrated that the N-Myc-induced molecular program accurately classifies our cohort of patients with advanced prostate cancer. Finally, we revealed the potential for EZH2 inhibition to reverse the N-Myc-induced suppression of epithelial lineage genes. Altogether, our data provide insights on how N-Myc regulates lineage plasticity and epigenetic reprogramming associated with lineage-specification. The N-Myc signature we defined could also help predict the evolution of prostate cancer and thus better guide the choice of future therapeutic strategies.


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