Low tristetraprolin expression activates phenotypic plasticity and primes transition to lethal prostate cancer in mice.

Abstract

Phenotypic plasticity is a hallmark of cancer and increasingly realized as a mechanism of resistance to androgen receptor (AR)-targeted therapy. Now that many prostate cancer (PCa) patients are treated upfront with AR-targeted agents, it's critical to identify actionable mechanisms that drive phenotypic plasticity, to prevent the emergence of resistance. We showed that loss of tristetraprolin (TTP, gene ZFP36) increased NF-κB activation, and was associated with higher rates of aggressive disease and early recurrence in primary PCa. We also examined the clinical and biological impact of ZFP36 loss with co-loss of PTEN, a known driver of PCa. Analysis of multiple independent primary PCa cohorts demonstrated that PTEN and ZFP36 co-loss was associated with increased recurrence risk. Engineering prostate-specific Zfp36 deletion in vivo, induced prostatic intraepithelial neoplasia, and, with Pten co-deletion, resulted in rapid progression to castration-resistant adenocarcinoma. Zfp36 loss altered the cell state driven by Pten loss, demonstrated by enrichment of EMT, inflammation, TNFα/NF-κB, IL6-JAK/STAT3 gene sets. Additionally, our work revealed that ZFP36 loss also induced enrichment of multiple gene sets involved in mononuclear cell migration, chemotaxis, and proliferation. Use of the NF-κB inhibitor, dimethylaminoparthenolide (DMAPT) induced marked therapeutic responses in tumors with PTEN and ZFP36 co-loss and reversed castration resistance.

More about this publication

The Journal of clinical investigation
  • Publication date 19-11-2024

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