Abstract

BackgroundThe androgen receptor (AR) plays important roles in the development of male phenotype and in different human diseases including prostate cancers. The AR can act either as a promoter or a tumor suppressor depending on cell types. The AR proliferative response program has been well studied, but its prohibitive response program has not yet been thoroughly studied.Methodology/Principal FindingsPrevious studies found that PC3 cells expressing the wild-type AR inhibit growth and suppress invasion. We applied expression profiling to identify the response program of PC3 cells expressing the AR (PC3-AR) under different growth conditions (i.e. with or without androgens and at different concentration of androgens) and then applied the newly developed ChIP-seq technology to identify the AR binding regions in the PC3 cancer genome. A surprising finding was that the comparison of MOCK-transfected PC3 cells with AR-transfected cells identified 3,452 differentially expressed genes (two fold cutoff) even without the addition of androgens (i.e. in ethanol control), suggesting that a ligand independent activation or extremely low-level androgen activation of the AR. ChIP-Seq analysis revealed 6,629 AR binding regions in the cancer genome of PC3 cells with an FDR (false discovery rate) cut off of 0.05. About 22.4% (638 of 2,849) can be mapped to within 2 kb of the transcription start site (TSS). Three novel AR binding motifs were identified in the AR binding regions of PC3-AR cells, and two of them share a core consensus sequence CGAGCTCTTC, which together mapped to 27.3% of AR binding regions (1,808/6,629). In contrast, only about 2.9% (190/6,629) of AR binding sites contains the canonical AR matrix M00481, M00447 and M00962 (from the Transfac database), which is derived mostly from AR proliferative responsive genes in androgen dependent cells. In addition, we identified four top ranking co-occupancy transcription factors in the AR binding regions, which include TEF1 (Transcriptional enhancer factor), GATA (GATA transcription factors), OCT (octamer transcription factors) and PU1 (PU.1 transcription factor).Conclusions/SignificanceOur data provide a valuable data set in understanding the molecular basis for growth inhibition response program of the AR in prostate cancer cells, which can be exploited for developing novel prostate cancer therapeutic strategies.

Highlights

  • Androgens and the androgen receptor (AR) play important biological roles in the development of male phenotype and urogenital tissues, including prostate, and in the initiation and progression of many human diseases

  • To see how many AR motifs were found in the AR binding regions, we loaded the AR matrix tables for M00481, M00447 and M00962 into the CisGenome program to compare to all AR binding regions that we identified in PC3 cells with a likelihood (LR) ratio of 500 compared to genomic background

  • We showed that AR could be activated in low androgen or ligand independent manner in advanced prostate cancer cell line PC3 cells expressing the AR. the comparison of vector-transfected PC3 cells with AR-transfected PC3 cells showed that 3,449 genes are differentially expressed even without addition of androgens (Figure 1 and table S1)

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Summary

Introduction

Androgens and the androgen receptor (AR) play important biological roles in the development of male phenotype and urogenital tissues, including prostate, and in the initiation and progression of many human diseases. Prostate cancers are often treated with hormone deprivation strategies such as orchidectomy, a luteinizing hormone-releasing hormone (LHRH) analogue, or an antiandrogen. They are initially responsive to the treatment strategy, most prostate cancers progress to ‘hormonerefractory’ or ‘androgen-independent’ disease. The androgen receptor (AR) plays important roles in the development of male phenotype and in different human diseases including prostate cancers. The AR proliferative response program has been well studied, but its prohibitive response program has not yet been thoroughly studied

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