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TLE3 loss confers AR inhibitor resistance by facilitating GR-mediated human prostate cancer cell growth.

Sander Al Palit ,
Daniel Vis ,
Suzan Stelloo ,
Cor Lieftink ,
Stefan Prekovic ,
Elise Bekers ,
Ingrid Hofland ,
Tonći Šuštić ,
Liesanne Wolters ,
Roderick Beijersbergen ,
Andries M Bergman ,
Balázs Győrffy ,
Lodewyk Fa Wessels ,
Wilbert Zwart ,
Michiel S van der Heijden

Abstract

Androgen receptor (AR) inhibitors represent the mainstay of prostate cancer treatment. In a genome-wide CRISPR-Cas9 screen using LNCaP prostate cancer cells, loss of co-repressor TLE3 conferred resistance to AR antagonists apalutamide and enzalutamide. Genes differentially expressed upon TLE3 loss share AR as the top transcriptional regulator, and TLE3 loss rescued the expression of a subset of androgen-responsive genes upon enzalutamide treatment. GR expression was strongly upregulated upon AR inhibition in a TLE3-negative background. This was consistent with binding of TLE3 and AR at the GR locus. Furthermore, GR binding was observed proximal to TLE3/AR-shared genes. GR inhibition resensitized TLE3KO cells to enzalutamide. Analyses of patient samples revealed an association between TLE3 and GR levels that reflected our findings in LNCaP cells, of which the clinical relevance is yet to be determined. Together, our findings reveal a mechanistic link between TLE3 and GR-mediated resistance to AR inhibitors in human prostate cancer.

More about this publication

eLife

Volume 8
Publication date 19-12-2019

Full text links

Publisher website (DOI) 10.7554/eLife.47430
Europe PubMed Central 31855178
Pubmed 31855178

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