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Antagonizing CD105 and androgen receptor to target stromal-epithelial interactions for clinical benefit

Authors :
Bethany N. Smith
Rajeev Mishra
Sandrine Billet
Veronica R. Placencio-Hickok
Minhyung Kim
Le Zhang
Frank Duong
Anisha Madhav
Kevin Scher
Nancy Moldawer
Amy Oppenheim
Bryan Angara
Sungyong You
Mourad Tighiouart
Edwin M. Posadas
Neil A. Bhowmick
Source :
Molecular therapy : the journal of the American Society of Gene Therapy. 31(1)
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

Androgen receptor signaling inhibitors (ARSIs) are standard of care for advanced prostate cancer (PCa) patients. Eventual resistance to ARSIs can include the expression of androgen receptor (AR) splice variant, AR-V7, expression as a recognized means of ligand-independent androgen signaling. We demonstrated that interleukin (IL)-6-mediated AR-V7 expression requires bone morphogenic protein (BMP) and CD105 receptor activity in both PCa and associated fibroblasts. Chromatin immunoprecipitation supported CD105-dependent ID1- and E2F-mediated expression of RBM38. Further, RNA immune precipitation demonstrated RBM38 binds the AR-cryptic exon 3 to enable AR-V7 generation. The forced expression of AR-V7 by primary prostatic fibroblasts diminished PCa sensitivity to ARSI. Conversely, downregulation of AR-V7 expression in cancer epithelia and associated fibroblasts was achieved by a CD105-neutralizing antibody, carotuximab. These compelling pre-clinical findings initiated an interventional study in PCa patients developing ARSI resistance. The combination of carotuximab and ARSI (i.e., enzalutamide or abiraterone) provided disease stabilization in four of nine assessable ARSI-refractory patients. Circulating tumor cell evaluation showed AR-V7 downregulation in the responsive subjects on combination treatment and revealed a three-gene panel that was predictive of response. The systemic antagonism of BMP/CD105 signaling can support ARSI re-sensitization in pre-clinical models and subjects that have otherwise developed resistance due to AR-V7 expression.

Details

ISSN :
15250024
Volume :
31
Issue :
1
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Molecular therapy : the journal of the American Society of Gene Therapy
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....5d9618b52e7a6f96664d764cf2c26115