4.6 Article

Targeting fatty acid synthase with ASC-J9 suppresses proliferation and invasion of prostate cancer cells

期刊

MOLECULAR CARCINOGENESIS
卷 55, 期 12, 页码 2278-2290

出版社

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/mc.22468

关键词

fatty acid synthase; castration resistant prostate cancer; androgen deprivation therapy; ASC-J9 (R)

资金

  1. NIH [CA156700]
  2. George Whipple Professorship Endowment
  3. Taiwan Department of Health Clinical Trial
  4. Research Center of Excellence [DOH99-TD-B-111-004]
  5. China 973 [CB518304]
  6. National Natural Young Scientists Fund of China [81502217]
  7. Taiwan Ministry of Health and Welfare Clinical Trial and Research Center of Excellence [DOH102-TD-B-111-004]

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Fatty acid synthase (FASN) is the key enzyme for the control of fatty acid synthesis that contributes significantly to the prostate cancer (PCa) progression. It was reported that androgens were able to induce FASN expression in PCa, and addition of the anti-androgen Casodex might suppress the androgen-induced FASN expression. However, here we found androgen-deprivation-therapy (ADT) with anti-androgens Bicalutamide (Casodex) or Enzalutamide (MDV3100) had little effect to suppress FASN expression and FASN-mediated cell growth and invasion during the castration resistant stage when the androgen concentration is 1nM DHT (dihydrotestosterone). In contrast, the newly developed androgen receptor (AR) degradation enhancer ASC-J9((R)) suppressed FASN expression and FASN-mediated cell growth and invasion in various PCa cell lines at 1nM DHT. Mechanism dissection found ASC-J9((R)) could suppress significantly the FASN expression and FASN-mediated PCa progression via the AR-dependent pathway involving ARSREBP-1FASN signaling in AR-positive C4-2 and LNCaP cells and via the AR-independent pathway involving the modulation of PI3K/AKTSREBP-1FASN signaling in AR-negative PC-3 and DU145 cells. Together, these results suggest that FASN is one of the important mechanism why the current ADT eventually fails. ASC-J9((R)) might represent a new potential therapeutic approach to suppress FASN-mediated PCa progression via both AR-dependent and AR-independent pathways during the castration resistant stage of PCa. (c) 2016 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.

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