Abstract

Androgen ablation therapy causes a temporary reduction in tumor burden in patients with advanced prostate cancer. Unfortunately the malignancy will return to form lethal castration-recurrent prostate cancer (CRPC). The androgen receptor (AR) remains transcriptionally active in CRPC in spite of castrate levels of androgens in the blood. AR transcriptional activity resides in its N-terminal domain (NTD). Possible mechanisms of continued AR transcriptional activity may include, at least in part, expression of constitutively active splice variants of AR that lack the C-terminal ligand-binding domain (LBD). Current therapies that target the AR LBD, would not be effective against these AR variants. Currently no drugs are clinically available that target the AR NTD which should be effective against these AR variants as well as full-length AR. Niphatenones were originally isolated and identified in active extracts from Niphates digitalis marine sponge. Here we begin to characterize the mechanism of niphatenones in blocking AR transcriptional activity. Both enantiomers had similar IC50 values of 6 µM for inhibiting the full-length AR in a functional transcriptional assay. However, (S)-niphatenone had significantly better activity against the AR NTD compared to (R)-niphatenone. Consistent with niphatenones binding to and inhibiting transactivation of AR NTD, niphatenones inhibited AR splice variant. Niphatenone did not affect the transcriptional activity of the related progesterone receptor, but slightly decreased glucocorticoid receptor (GR) activity and covalently bound to GR activation function-1 (AF-1) region. Niphatenone blocked N/C interactions of AR without altering either AR protein levels or its intracellular localization in response to androgen. Alkylation with glutathione suggests that niphatenones are not a feasible scaffold for further drug development.

Highlights

  • Recurrence of prostate cancer after primary therapies occurs in approximately 20% of patients

  • Inhibitors of the androgen receptor (AR) N-terminal domain (NTD) would be beneficial for blocking all AR species because the NTD contains the activation function-1 (AF-1) region that is essential for AR transcriptional activity [10]

  • Such AR NTD inhibitors would be of clinical value for the treatments of diseases of the androgen axis such as prostate cancer

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Summary

Introduction

Recurrence of prostate cancer after primary therapies occurs in approximately 20% of patients. There is continued transactivation of AR even though blood levels of androgen are low. Androgens mediate their effects through the AR which is a ligand-activated transcription factor. This receptor contains several functional domains that include: the ligand-binding domain (LBD) to which androgens and antiandrogens bind; the hinge region which contains a nuclear translocation sequence; the DNA-binding domain (DBD) which binds to sequences called androgen response elements (AREs) in the enhancers and promoters of target genes; and the N-terminal domain (NTD)

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