[HTML][HTML] Transcriptional mediators of treatment resistance in lethal prostate cancer

MX He, MS Cuoco, J Crowdis, A Bosma-Moody… - Nature medicine, 2021 - nature.com
MX He, MS Cuoco, J Crowdis, A Bosma-Moody, Z Zhang, K Bi, A Kanodia, MJ Su, SY Ku
Nature medicine, 2021nature.com
Metastatic castration-resistant prostate cancer is typically lethal, exhibiting intrinsic or
acquired resistance to second-generation androgen-targeting therapies and minimal
response to immune checkpoint inhibitors. Cellular programs driving resistance in both
cancer and immune cells remain poorly understood. We present single-cell transcriptomes
from 14 patients with advanced prostate cancer, spanning all common metastatic sites.
Irrespective of treatment exposure, adenocarcinoma cells pervasively coexpressed multiple …
Abstract
Metastatic castration-resistant prostate cancer is typically lethal, exhibiting intrinsic or acquired resistance to second-generation androgen-targeting therapies and minimal response to immune checkpoint inhibitors. Cellular programs driving resistance in both cancer and immune cells remain poorly understood. We present single-cell transcriptomes from 14 patients with advanced prostate cancer, spanning all common metastatic sites. Irrespective of treatment exposure, adenocarcinoma cells pervasively coexpressed multiple androgen receptor isoforms, including truncated isoforms hypothesized to mediate resistance to androgen-targeting therapies,. Resistance to enzalutamide was associated with cancer cell–intrinsic epithelial–mesenchymal transition and transforming growth factor-β signaling. Small cell carcinoma cells exhibited divergent expression programs driven by transcriptional regulators promoting lineage plasticity and HOXB5, HOXB6 and NR1D2 (refs. , –). Additionally, a subset of patients had high expression of dysfunction markers on cytotoxic CD8+ T cells undergoing clonal expansion following enzalutamide treatment. Collectively, the transcriptional characterization of cancer and immune cells from human metastatic castration-resistant prostate cancer provides a basis for the development of therapeutic approaches complementing androgen signaling inhibition.
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