Truncation and constitutive activation of the androgen receptor by diverse genomic rearrangements in prostate cancer

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Abstract

Molecularly targeted therapies for advanced prostate cancer include castration modalities that suppress ligand-dependent transcriptional activity of the androgen receptor (AR). However, persistent AR signalling undermines therapeutic efficacy and promotes progression to lethal castration-resistant prostate cancer (CRPC), even when patients are treated with potent second-generation AR-targeted therapies abiraterone and enzalutamide. Here we define diverse AR genomic structural rearrangements (AR-GSRs) as a class of molecular alterations occurring in one third of CRPC-stage tumours. AR-GSRs occur in the context of copy-neutral and amplified AR and display heterogeneity in breakpoint location, rearrangement class and sub-clonal enrichment in tumours within and between patients. Despite this heterogeneity, one common outcome in tumours with high sub-clonal enrichment of AR-GSRs is outlier expression of diverse AR variant species lacking the ligand-binding domain and possessing ligand-independent transcriptional activity. Collectively, these findings reveal AR-GSRs as important drivers of persistent AR signalling in CRPC.

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Henzler, C., Li, Y., Yang, R., McBride, T., Ho, Y., Sprenger, C., … Dehm, S. M. (2016). Truncation and constitutive activation of the androgen receptor by diverse genomic rearrangements in prostate cancer. Nature Communications, 7. https://doi.org/10.1038/ncomms13668

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