TY - JOUR
T1 - Strategy for tumor-selective disruption of androgen receptor function in the spectrum of prostate cancer
AU - Rosati, Rayna
AU - Polin, Lisa
AU - Ducker, Charles
AU - Li, Jing
AU - Bao, Xun
AU - Selvakumar, Dakshnamurthy
AU - Kim, Seongho
AU - Xhabija, Besa
AU - Larsen, Martha
AU - McFall, Thomas
AU - Huang, Yanfang
AU - Kidder, Benjamin L.
AU - Fribley, Andrew
AU - Saxton, Janice
AU - Kakuta, Hiroki
AU - Shaw, Peter
AU - Ratnam, Manohar
N1 - Funding Information:
This work was supported by DoD grants W81XWH-17-1-0242 (to M. Ratnam) and W81XWH-17-1-0243 (to P. Shaw), and NIH 5T32CA009531-29 NRSA T32 Fellowships (to R. Rosati and T. McFall).
Funding Information:
We thank the Biospecimen Core at Karmanos Cancer Institute and Dr. Elisabeth Heath for sharing the prostate cancer PDX model. We also thank Drs. Sijana Dzinic and Juiwanna Kushner for assistance with the animal model experiments. We are grateful to Curtis Krier at RUCDR Infinite Biologics for his help in facilitating the Affymetrix DNA microarray studies. This work was supported by DoD grants W81XWH-17-1-0242 (to M. Ratnam) and W81XWH-17-1-0243 (to P. Shaw), and NIH 5T32CA009531-29 NRSA T32 Fellowships (to R. Rosati and T. McFall).
Publisher Copyright:
© 2018 American Association for Cancer Research.
PY - 2018/12/15
Y1 - 2018/12/15
N2 - Purpose: Testosterone suppression in prostate cancer is limited by serious side effects and resistance via restoration of androgen receptor (AR) functionality. ELK1 is required for AR-dependent growth in various hormone-dependent and castration-resistant prostate cancer models. The amino-terminal domain of AR docks at two sites on ELK1 to coactivate essential growth genes. This study explores the ability of small molecules to disrupt the ELK1–AR interaction in the spectrum of prostate cancer, inhibiting AR activity in a manner that would predict functional tumor selectivity. Experimental Design: Small-molecule drug discovery and extensive biological characterization of a lead compound. Results: We have discovered a lead molecule (KCI807) that selectively disrupts ELK1-dependent promoter activation by wild-type and variant ARs without interfering with ELK1 activation by ERK. KCI807 has an obligatory flavone scaffold and functional hydroxyl groups on C5 and C3'. KCI807 binds to AR, blocking ELK1 binding, and selectively blocks recruitment of AR to chromatin by ELK1. KCI807 primarily affects a subset of AR target growth genes selectively suppressing AR-dependent growth of prostate cancer cell lines with a better inhibitory profile than enzalutamide. KCI807 also inhibits in vivo growth of castration/enzalutamide-resistant cell line–derived and patient-derived tumor xenografts. In the rodent model, KCI807 has a plasma half-life of 6 hours, and maintenance of its antitumor effect is limited by self-induced metabolism at its 3 0 -hydroxyl. Conclusions: The results offer a mechanism-based therapeutic paradigm for disrupting the AR growth-promoting axis in the spectrum of prostate tumors while reducing global suppression of testosterone actions. KCI807 offers a good lead molecule for drug development.
AB - Purpose: Testosterone suppression in prostate cancer is limited by serious side effects and resistance via restoration of androgen receptor (AR) functionality. ELK1 is required for AR-dependent growth in various hormone-dependent and castration-resistant prostate cancer models. The amino-terminal domain of AR docks at two sites on ELK1 to coactivate essential growth genes. This study explores the ability of small molecules to disrupt the ELK1–AR interaction in the spectrum of prostate cancer, inhibiting AR activity in a manner that would predict functional tumor selectivity. Experimental Design: Small-molecule drug discovery and extensive biological characterization of a lead compound. Results: We have discovered a lead molecule (KCI807) that selectively disrupts ELK1-dependent promoter activation by wild-type and variant ARs without interfering with ELK1 activation by ERK. KCI807 has an obligatory flavone scaffold and functional hydroxyl groups on C5 and C3'. KCI807 binds to AR, blocking ELK1 binding, and selectively blocks recruitment of AR to chromatin by ELK1. KCI807 primarily affects a subset of AR target growth genes selectively suppressing AR-dependent growth of prostate cancer cell lines with a better inhibitory profile than enzalutamide. KCI807 also inhibits in vivo growth of castration/enzalutamide-resistant cell line–derived and patient-derived tumor xenografts. In the rodent model, KCI807 has a plasma half-life of 6 hours, and maintenance of its antitumor effect is limited by self-induced metabolism at its 3 0 -hydroxyl. Conclusions: The results offer a mechanism-based therapeutic paradigm for disrupting the AR growth-promoting axis in the spectrum of prostate tumors while reducing global suppression of testosterone actions. KCI807 offers a good lead molecule for drug development.
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U2 - 10.1158/1078-0432.CCR-18-0982
DO - 10.1158/1078-0432.CCR-18-0982
M3 - Article
C2 - 30185422
AN - SCOPUS:85058440559
SN - 1078-0432
VL - 24
SP - 6509
EP - 6522
JO - Clinical Cancer Research
JF - Clinical Cancer Research
IS - 24
ER -