Affiliation:
1. The University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston
2. Integrated Hospital of Traditional Chinese Medicine, Southern Medical University
3. Shanghai Sixth People's Hospital, Shanghai Jiaotong University
4. Brown Foundation Institute of Molecular Medicine
5. The Brown Foundation Institute of Molecular Medicine, The University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston
Abstract
Abstract
Although effective initially, prolonged androgen deprivation therapy (ADT) promotes neuroendocrine differentiation (NED) and prostate cancer (PCa) progression. It is incompletely understood how ADT transcriptionally induces NE genes in PCa cells. CREB1 and REST are known to positively and negatively regulate neuronal gene expression in the brain, respectively. No direct link between these two master neuronal regulators has been elucidated in the NED of PCa. We show that REST mRNA is downregulated in NEPC cell and mouse models, as well as in patient samples. Phenotypically, REST overexpression increases ADT sensitivity, represses NE genes, inhibits colony formation in culture, and xenograft tumor growth of PCa cells. As expected, ADT downregulates REST in PCa cells in culture and in mouse xenografts. Interestingly, CREB1 signaling represses REST expression. In studying the largely unclear mechanism underlying transcriptional repression of REST by ADT, we found that REST is a direct target of EZH2 epigenetic repression. Finally, genetic rescue experiments demonstrated that ADT induces NED through EZH2’s repression of REST, which is enhanced by ADT-activated CREB signaling. In summary, our study has revealed a key pathway underlying NE gene upregulation by ADT, as well as established novel relationships between CREB1 and REST, and between EZH2 and REST, which may also have implications in other cancer types and in neurobiology.
Publisher
Research Square Platform LLC
Cited by
1 articles.
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