Chronic IL-1 exposure drives LNCaP cells to evolve androgen and AR independence

Haley Dahl(The University of Texas at Dallas), Mohammed Kanchwala, Shayna Thomas-Jardin(The University of Texas at Dallas), Ariel Sandhu(The University of Texas at Dallas), Preethi Kanumuri(The University of Texas at Dallas), Afshan F. Nawas(The University of Texas at Dallas), Chungen Xing(The University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center), C. Lin(The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center), Daniel E. Frigo(Houston Methodist), Nikkí A. Delk(The University of Texas at Dallas)
bioRxiv (Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory)
April 23, 2020
Cited by 8Open Access
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Abstract

Abstract Chronic inflammation promotes prostate cancer (PCa) initiation and progression. We previously reported that acute intereluekin-1 (IL-1) exposure represses androgen receptor (AR) accumulation and activity, providing a possible mechanism for IL-1-mediated development of androgen- and AR-independent PCa. Given that acute inflammation is quickly resolved, and chronic inflammation is, instead, co-opted by cancer cells to promote tumorigenicity, we set out to determine if chronic IL-1 exposure leads to similar repression of AR and AR activity observed for acute IL-1 exposure and to determine if chronic IL-1 exposure selects for androgen- and AR- independent PCa cells. We generated isogenic sublines from LNCaP cells chronically exposed to IL-1α or IL-1β. Cells were treated with IL-1α, IL-1β, TNFα or HS-5 bone marrow stromal cells conditioned medium to assess cell viability in the presence of cytotoxic inflammatory cytokines. Cell viability was also assessed following serum starvation, AR siRNA silencing and enzalutamide treatment. Finally, RNA sequencing was performed for the IL-1 sublines. MTT, RT-qPCR and western blot analysis show that the sublines evolved resistance to inflammation- induced cytotoxicity and intracellular signaling and evolved reduced sensitivity to siRNA- mediated loss of AR , serum deprivation and enzalutamide. Differential gene expression reveals that canonical AR signaling is aberrant in the IL-1 sublines, where the cells show constitutive PSA repression and basally high KLK2 and NKX3.1 mRNA levels and bioinformatics analysis predicts that pro-survival and pro-tumorigenic pathways are activated in the sublines. Our data provide evidence that chronic IL-1 exposure promotes PCa cell androgen and AR independence and, thus, supports CRPCa development.


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