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ADORA2A-driven proline synthesis triggers epigenetic reprogramming in neuroendocrine prostate and lung cancers

Authors :
Jing, Na
Zhang, Kai
Chen, Xinyu
Liu, Kaiyuan
Wang, Jinming
Xiao, Lingling
Zhang, Wentian
Ma, Pengfei
Xu, Penghui
Cheng, Chaping
Wang, Deng
Zhao, Huifang
He, Yuman
Ji, Zhongzhong
Xin, Zhixiang
Sun, Yujiao
Zhang, Yingchao
Bao, Wei
Gong, Yiming
Fan, Liancheng
Ji, Yiyi
Zhuang, Guanglei
Wang, Qi
Dong, Baijun
Zhang, Pengcheng
Xue, Wei
Gao, Wei- Qiang
Zhu, Helen He
Source :
Journal of Clinical Investigation. December 15, 2023, Vol. 133 Issue 24
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

Introduction Lineage plasticity is often exploited by cancer cells to acquire therapeutic resistance (1). Lineage transition from adenocarcinoma (AD) to aggressive neuroendocrine (NE) derivatives is a common type of cancer [...]<br />Cell lineage plasticity is one of the major causes for the failure of targeted therapies in various cancers. However, the driver and actionable drug targets in promoting cancer cell lineage plasticity are scarcely identified. Here, we found that a G protein-coupled receptor, ADORA2A, is specifically upregulated during neuroendocrine differentiation, a common form of lineage plasticity in prostate cancer and lung cancer following targeted therapies. Activation of the ADORA2A signaling rewires the proline metabolism via an ERK/MYC/PYCR cascade. Increased proline synthesis promotes deacetylases SIRT6/7-mediated deacetylation of histone H3 at lysine 27 (H3K27), and thereby biases a global transcriptional output toward a neuroendocrine lineage profile. Ablation of Adora2a in genetically engineered mouse models inhibits the development and progression of neuroendocrine prostate and lung cancers, and, intriguingly, prevents the adenocarcinoma-to-neuroendocrine phenotypic transition. Importantly, pharmacological blockade of ADORA2A profoundly represses neuroendocrine prostate and lung cancer growth in vivo. Therefore, we believe that ADORA2A can be used as a promising therapeutic target to govern the epigenetic reprogramming in neuroendocrine malignancies.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00219738
Volume :
133
Issue :
24
Database :
Gale General OneFile
Journal :
Journal of Clinical Investigation
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsgcl.779660436
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1172/JCI168670