Abstract

BackgroundMYCN amplification or N-Myc overexpression is found in approximately 40% NEPC and up to 20% CRPC patients. N-Myc has been demonstrated to drive disease progression and hormonal therapeutic resistance of NEPC/CRPC. Here, we aim to identify the molecular mechanisms underlying the N-Myc-driven therapeutic resistance and provide new therapeutic targets for those N-Myc overexpressed NEPC/CRPC.MethodsN-Myc overexpressing stable cell lines for LNCaP and C4–2 were generated by lentivirus infection. ADT-induced senescence was measured by SA-β-gal staining in LNCaP cells in vitro and in LNCaP xenograft tumors in vivo. Migration, cell proliferation and colony formation assays were used to measure the cellular response after overexpressing N-Myc or perturbing the miR-421/ATM pathway. CRISPR-Cas9 was used to knock out ATM in C4–2 cells and MTS cell viability assay was used to evaluate the drug sensitivity of N-Myc overexpressing C4–2 cells in response to Enzalutamide and ATM inhibitor Ku60019 respectively or in combination.ResultsN-Myc overexpression suppressed ATM expression through upregulating miR-421 in LNCaP cells. This suppression alleviated the ADT-induced senescence in vitro and in vivo. Surprisingly, N-Myc overexpression upregulated ATM expression in C4–2 cells and this upregulation promoted migration and invasion of prostate cancer cells. Further, the N-Myc-induced ATM upregulation in C4–2 cells rendered the cells resistance to Enzalutamide, and inhibition of ATM by CRISPR-Cas9 knockout or ATM inhibitor Ku60019 re-sensitized them to Enzalutamide.ConclusionsN-Myc differentially regulating miR-421/ATM pathway contributes to ADT resistance and Enzalutamide resistance development respectively. Combination treatment with ATM inhibitor re-sensitizes N-Myc overexpressed CRPC cells to Enzalutamide. Our findings would offer a potential combination therapeutic strategy using ATM kinase inhibitor and Enzalutamide for the treatment of a subset of mCRPC with N-Myc overexpression that accounts for up to 20% CRPC patients.

Highlights

  • Neuroendocrine prostate cancer (NEPC) represents the lethal endpoint stage of prostate cancer and is more commonly thought to emerge from prostate cancer adenocarcinoma (PCA) after hormonal therapy [6, 25, 32]

  • N-Myc overexpression confers LNCaP cells the resistance to Androgen Deprivation Therapy (ADT) and C4–2 cells the resistance to Enzalutamide To recapitulate the N-Myc-driven therapeutic resistance of prostate cancer to ADT and Enzalutamide in vitro, we generated N-Myc overexpressing stable cell lines for RWPE-1, LNCaP and C4–2, which represent normal, androgen-responsive PCA and androgen-independent Castration Resistant Prostate Cancer (CRPC), by lentivirus infection

  • We examined whether N-Myc overexpression leads to the resistance of LNCaP cells to ADT and the resistance of C4–2 cells to Enzalutamide

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Summary

Introduction

Neuroendocrine prostate cancer (NEPC) represents the lethal endpoint stage of prostate cancer and is more commonly thought to emerge from prostate cancer adenocarcinoma (PCA) after hormonal therapy [6, 25, 32]. MYCN gene amplification and/or N-Myc oncoprotein overexpression is found in ~ 40% NEPC [5] and up to 20% CRPC without neuroendocrine phenotype [13], they are found in ~ 5% PCA [5, 28], suggesting that these amplification events can arise early before hormonal therapy. The N-Myc overexpressed prostate tumors are resistant to AR-targeted therapies, including ADT and Enzalutamide, indicating that N-Myc re-establishes other AR-independent pro-survival mechanisms/pathways to drive the disease progression and therapeutic resistance development. These N-Myc-induced new pro-survival mechanisms/pathways remain largely unknown. N-Myc has been demonstrated to drive disease progression and hormonal therapeutic resistance of NEPC/CRPC. We aim to identify the molecular mechanisms underlying the N-Myc-driven therapeutic resistance and provide new therapeutic targets for those N-Myc overexpressed NEPC/CRPC

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