Author:
Gray Jaimie S.,Wani Sajad A.,Hussain Shahid,Huang Phoebe,Nayak Debasis,Long Mark D.,Yates Clayton,Clinton Steven K.,Bennet Chad E.,Coss Christopher C.,Campbell Moray J.
Abstract
ABSTRACTWe have dissected the role of Estrogen receptor beta (ERβ) in prostate cancer (PCa) with a novel ERβ ligand, OSU-ERb-12. Drug screens revealed additive interactions between OSU-ERB-12 and either epigenetic inhibitors or the androgen receptor antagonist, Enzalutamide (Enza). Clonogenic and cell biolody studies supported the potent additive effects of OSU-ERB-12 (100nM) and Enza (1µM). The cooperative behavior was in PCa cell lines treated with either OSU- ERB-12 plus Enza or combinations involving 17β-estradiol (E2). OSU-ERb-12 plus Enza uniquely impacted the transcriptiome, accessible chromatin, and the AR, MYC and H3K27ac cistromes. This included skewed transcriptional responses including suppression of the androgen and MYC transcriptomes, and repressed MYC protein. OSU-ERb-12 plus Enza uniquely impacted chromatin accessibility at approximately 3000 nucleosome-free sites, enriched at enhancers, enriched for basic Helix-Loop-Helix motifs. CUT&RUN experiments revealed combination treatment targeting of MYC, AR, and H3K27ac again shaping enhancer accessibility. Specifically, it repressed MYC interactions at enhancer regions enriched for bHLH motifs, and overlapped with publicly-available bHLH cistromes. Finally, cistrome-transcriptome analyses identified ∼200 genes that distinguished advanced PCa tumors in the SU2C cohort with high androgen and low neuroendocrine scores.Statement of ImplicationTargeting ERβ has potentially to augment AR antagonism to restrain MYC signaling and limit growth of advanced prostate cancer.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory