Mayo Clinic researchers have identified a new cause of treatment resistance in prostate cancer. Their discovery also suggests ways to improve prostate cancer therapy. The findings appear in Nature Medicine.
BET, bromodomain and extra-terminal domain, inhibitors are drugs that prevent the action of BET proteins. These proteins help guide the abnormal growth of cancer cells.
As a therapy, BET-inhibitors are promising, but drug resistance often develops, says Haojie Huang, Ph.D., senior author and a molecular biologist within Mayo Clinic's Center for Biomedical Discovery. Prostate cancer is among the most diagnosed malignancies in the United States. It is also the third leading cause of cancer death in American men, according to the American Cancer Society. Because of this, says Dr. Huang, improving treatments for prostate cancer is an important public health goal.
In the publication, the authors report SPOP mutations stabilize BET proteins against the action of BET-inhibitors. By this action, the mutations also promote cancer cell proliferation, invasion, and survival.
"These findings have important implications for prostate cancer treatment because SPOP mutation or elevated BET protein expression can now be used as biomarkers to improve the outcome of BET inhibitor-oriented therapy of prostate cancer with SPOP mutation or BET protein overexpression," says Dr. Huang. Mutations in the SPOP gene can then be used to guide administration of anticancer drugs in patients with prostate cancer: The Nature Medicine publication presents four major discoveries:
- BET proteins (BRD2, BRD3, and BRD4) are true degradation substrates of SPOP.
- SPOP mutations cause elevation of BET proteins in prostate cancer patient specimens.
- Expression of SPOP mutants leads to BET-inhibitor resistance and activation the AKT-mTORC1 pathway that promotes cancer cell growth and survival.
- Co-administration of AKT inhibitors overcomes BET inhibitor resistance in SPOP-mutated prostate cancer. Mayo Clinic Ventures, the technology commercialization arm of Mayo Clinic, has a patent application in place for this promising prostate cancer biomarker and therapeutic technology.
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Materials provided by Mayo Clinic August 2017
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