1. Targeting castration-resistant prostate cancer with a novel RORγ antagonist elaiophylin
- Author
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Jianwei Zheng, Junfeng Wang, Zhenhua Zhang, Peiqing Liu, Qianqian Wang, Haibin Wang, Jing Lu, Hongye Zou, Yonghong Liu, Songtao Xiang, Jinping Lei, Hong Wang, Fanghai Han, Panxia Wang, Qian Wang, Hongwu Chen, Jianghe Chen, Xiaolei Zhang, Junjian Wang, and Yueshan Zhao
- Subjects
Urologic Diseases ,Aging ,Response element ,urologic and male genital diseases ,03 medical and health sciences ,Prostate cancer ,0302 clinical medicine ,Genetics ,Transcriptional regulation ,medicine ,2.1 Biological and endogenous factors ,Aetiology ,General Pharmacology, Toxicology and Pharmaceutics ,ROR gamma ,Gene ,Castration-resistant prostate cancer ,RORγ ,Cancer ,030304 developmental biology ,0303 health sciences ,Elaiophylin ,Cell growth ,Chemistry ,Prostate Cancer ,lcsh:RM1-950 ,Antagonist ,medicine.disease ,lcsh:Therapeutics. Pharmacology ,Nuclear receptor ,5.1 Pharmaceuticals ,Cell culture ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Cancer research ,Development of treatments and therapeutic interventions ,Biotechnology - Abstract
Prostate cancer (PCa) patients who progress to metastatic castration-resistant PCa (mCRPC) mostly have poor outcomes due to the lack of effective therapies. Our recent study established the orphan nuclear receptor RORγ as a novel therapeutic target for CRPC. Here, we reveal that elaiophylin (Elai), an antibiotic from Actinomycete streptomyces, is a novel RORγ antagonist and showed potent antitumor activity against CRPC in vitro and in vivo. We demonstrated that Elai selectively binded to RORγ protein and potently blocked RORγ transcriptional regulation activities. Structure–activity relationship studies showed that Elai occupied the binding pocket with several key interactions. Furthermore, Elai markedly reduced the recruitment of RORγ to its genomic DNA response element (RORE), suppressed the expression of RORγ target genes AR and AR variants, and significantly inhibited PCa cell growth. Importantly, Elai strongly suppressed tumor growth in both cell line based and patient-derived PCa xenograft models. Taken together, these results suggest that Elai is novel therapeutic RORγ inhibitor that can be used as a drug candidate for the treatment of human CRPC.
- Published
- 2020
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