Abstract

The androgen receptor (AR) is often activated in prostate cancer patients undergoing androgen-ablative therapy because of the activation of cellular pathways that stimulate the AR despite low androgen levels. In many of these tumors, the cAMP-dependent protein kinase A (PKA) pathway is activated. Previous studies have shown that PKA can synergize with low levels of androgen to enhance androgen signaling and consequent cell proliferation, leading to castration-resistant prostate cancer. However, the mechanism by which PKA causes AR stimulation in the presence of low/no androgen is not established yet. Here, using immunofluorescence immunoblotting assays, co-immunoprecipitation, siRNA-mediated gene silencing, and reporter gene assays, we demonstrate that PKA activation is necessary for the phosphorylation of heat shock protein (HSP90) that binds to unliganded AR in the cytoplasm, restricting its entry into the nucleus. We also found that PKA-mediated phosphorylation of the Thr89 residue in HSP90 releases AR from HSP90, enabling AR binding to HSP27 and its migration into the nucleus. Substitution of the Thr89 in HSP90 prevented its phosphorylation by PKA and significantly reduced AR transactivation and cellular proliferation. We further observed that the transcription of AR target genes, such as prostate-specific antigen (PSA), is also lowered in the HSP90 Thr89 variant. These results suggest that using a small-molecule inhibitor against the HSP90 Thr89 residue in conjunction with existing androgen-ablative therapy may be more effective than androgen-ablative therapy alone in the treatment of prostate cancer patients.

Highlights

  • The androgen receptor (AR) is often activated in prostate cancer patients undergoing androgen-ablative therapy because of the activation of cellular pathways that stimulate the AR despite low androgen levels

  • These results suggest that using a small-molecule inhibitor against the HSP90 Thr89 residue in conjunction with existing androgen-ablative therapy may be more effective than androgen-ablative therapy alone in the treatment of prostate cancer patients

  • Aberrant activation of AR is the primary cause of transition from androgen dependence to androgen independence observed in patients with advanced prostate cancer [14]

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Summary

Edited by Alex Toker

The androgen receptor (AR) is often activated in prostate cancer patients undergoing androgen-ablative therapy because of the activation of cellular pathways that stimulate the AR despite low androgen levels. In many of these tumors, the cAMP-dependent protein kinase A (PKA) pathway is activated. The activated ␣ subunit of Gs protein could activate AR in prostate cancer cells and synergize with low concentrations of androgen to completely activate the AR through PKA [6] These studies indicate a definite cross-talk between the two pathways, the exact role of PKA in AR activation is still unexplored. The unstimulated AR is bound to HSP90 and HSP70 in the cytosol, and phosphorylation of HSP90 protein at the Thr residue by PKA results in its disassociation from the AR, allowing the AR to bind to HSP27 and migrate into the nucleus

PKA activation is necessary for AR transactivation
PKA activation is necessary for nuclear translocation of AR
Discussion
Plasmids and reagents
Cell culture
Cell transfection and siRNA
Luciferase assay
Fluorescence imaging
Reverse transcription PCR
Statistical analysis
Full Text
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