Abstract

As a common therapy for prostate cancer, androgen deprivation therapy (ADT) is effective for the majority of patients. However, prolonged ADT promotes drug resistance and progression to an aggressive variant with reduced androgen receptor signaling, so called neuroendocrine prostate cancer (NEPC). Until present, NEPC is still poorly understood, and lethal with no effective treatments. Elevated expression of neuroendocrine related markers and increased angiogenesis are two prominent phenotypes of NEPC, and both of them are positively associated with cancers progression. However, direct molecular links between the two phenotypes in NEPC and their mechanisms remain largely unclear. Their elucidation should substantially expand our knowledge in NEPC. This knowledge, in turn, would facilitate the development of effective NEPC treatments. We recently showed that a single critical pathway regulates both ADT-enhanced angiogenesis and elevated expression of neuroendocrine markers. This pathway consists of CREB1, EZH2, and TSP1. Here, we seek new insights to identify molecules common to pathways promoting angiogenesis and neuroendocrine phenotypes in prostate cancer. To this end, our focus is to summarize the literature on proteins reported to regulate both neuroendocrine marker expression and angiogenesis as potential molecular links. These proteins, often described in separate biological contexts or diseases, include AURKA and AURKB, CHGA, CREB1, EZH2, FOXA2, GRK3, HIF1, IL-6, MYCN, ONECUT2, p53, RET, and RB1. We also present the current efforts in prostate cancer or other diseases to target some of these proteins, which warrants testing for NEPC, given the urgent unmet need in treating this aggressive variant of prostate cancer.

Highlights

  • In the United States, prostate cancer is responsible for the second most cancer death in men, behind lung cancer

  • We recently demonstrated that EZH2 presents a critical molecular link for NE phenotype and angiogenesis, downstream of androgen deprivation therapy (ADT)-activated PKA-CREB1 signaling [66]

  • We recently reported that propranolol downregulates NE marker expression and inhibits angiogenesis and growth of neuroendocrine prostate cancers (NEPC) cell-derived xenografts by blocking a critical pathway CREB1-EZH2-TSP1 [66]

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Summary

Introduction

In the United States, prostate cancer is responsible for the second most cancer death in men, behind lung cancer. It is estimated that about 31,620 deaths in 2019 in USA are caused by prostate cancer (www.cancer.org). Androgen deprivation therapies (ADT) that target the androgen receptor (AR) is the main treatment for prostate cancer [1,2,3,4]. Links Between Angiogenesis and NED tumors invariably relapse and progress, becoming castration resistant prostate cancer (CRPC) [1,2,3,4]. Associated with ADT resistance is the emergence of neuroendocrine prostate cancers (NEPC) that have a poor prognosis with no effective treatment [5,6,7,8]. With the common use of new generation potent ADT into clinic, the incidence of NEPC is rising [6, 9,10,11,12]

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