3
VIEWS JULY 2017 CANCER DISCOVERY | 673 IN THE SPOTLIGHT The Path of Most Resistance: Transdifferentiation Underlies Exceptional Nonresponses to Androgen Receptor Pathway Inhibition in Prostate Cancer Seema Sinha and Peter S. Nelson Divisions of Human Biology and Clinical Research, Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center, Seattle, Washington. Corresponding Author: Peter S. Nelson, Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center, Mail Stop D4-100, 1100 Fairview Avenue N, Seattle, WA 98109. Phone: 206-667-3377; Fax: 206-667-2917; E-mail: [email protected] doi: 10.1158/2159-8290.CD-17-0481 ©2017 American Association for Cancer Research. Summary: In this issue of Cancer Discovery, Zou and colleagues describe a mechanism involving cellular transdif- ferentiation that promotes exceptional resistance to antiandrogen therapy in prostate cancer. A background of coinactivation of Trp53 and Pten increased the frequency of the transdifferentiated neuroendocrine phenotype. These findings have implications for developing approaches to repress cellular plasticity and overcome treat- ment resistance. Cancer Discov; 7(7); 673–4. ©2017 AACR. See related article by Zou et al., p. 736 (3). Metastatic prostate cancer is a lethal disease. Since the 1950s, the treatment of advanced prostate cancer has focused on inhibiting the activity of the androgen receptor (AR), which functions as a lineage oncogene to maintain the sur- vival and growth of malignant prostate cells. Although initial responses to AR inhibition are nearly universal, so is the eventual development of resistance progressing to a clinical state broadly defined as castration-resistant prostate cancer (CRPC). The emergence of CRPC is usually accompanied by reactivation of AR signaling, which is then retargeted using agents such as abiraterone and enzalutamide that inhibit key mechanisms serving to maintain AR pathway activity (1). Unfortunately, resistance to these agents is essentially universal, but in this setting, the mechanisms appear to be more varied and can involve cellular programs that obviate the need for AR activity. One notable resistance pathway involves the acquisition of histopathologic features that dis- tinguish small-cell and neuroendocrine carcinomas (NEPC). The mechanism(s) responsible for the transition from an AR-dependent tumor to one with neuroendocrine character- istics remains poorly understood, but appears to fit within the parameters that define the process of metaplasia and, more specifically, transdifferentiation: the conversion of one differentiated cell type into another differentiated cell type without undergoing a pluripotent cell transition (2). Under- standing this process may lead to important insights that can be exploited to circumvent the development of this highly lethal cancer subtype. In the current article, Zou and colleagues sought to ascer- tain mechanisms that contribute to the development of resistance to AR pathway targeting (3). Previous studies have identified genomic aberrations that are enriched in CRPCs, including copy loss or mutation in several well-studied tumor suppressors: RB1, TP53, and PTEN (4). These alterations are further enriched in NEPC compared with those CRPCs that maintain features of adenocarcinomas in which AR signaling is active (5). To evaluate these molecular aberrations in the context of therapy, Zou and colleagues first constructed geneti- cally engineered mouse (GEM) models designed to inactivate the tumor suppressors Nkx3.1 and Pten (NP GEM) with or without the combined loss of Trp53 (NPp53 GEM) specifically in mouse prostate luminal epithelium. Both models devel- oped adenocarcinomas, and, following androgen deprivation, both models progressed to CRPC with an adenocarcinoma phenotype. Notably, following further AR pathway repression with abiraterone, the models exhibited divergent responses: The growth of NP CRPCs was significantly inhibited, whereas NPp53 CRPCs were refractory to abiraterone, and, in a subset, tumor growth accelerated. These tumors were classified as “exceptional nonresponders.” Metastases were also identified in several abiraterone-treated NPp53 GEM mice, whereas metasta- ses were not identified in those treated with a vehicle. Histopathologic assessment of the CRPCs revealed that NPp53 tumors exhibited a range of histologies, including several with small-cell/NEPC characteristics, which were most commonly observed following abiraterone treatment. These latter tumors were highly proliferative, lacked AR expression, and exhibited gene expression profiles concord- ant with those observed in human NEPC. Although most prevalent in the NPp53 tumors treated with abiraterone, regions of neoplastic cells without adenocarcinoma features were identified in tumors that had not been exposed to abi- raterone or androgen deprivation treatment, suggesting that preexisting tumor cells lacking Pten and Trp53 are primed to resist therapy. Extrapolating these findings across species leads to the testable hypothesis that patients with PTEN/ TP53–deficient tumors may resist abiraterone and potentially other AR-directed therapeutics and consequently also exhibit “exceptional nonresponder” phenotypes. Central to the question of how AR-positive prostate ade- nocarcinomas evolve to a therapy-resistant neuroendocrine Cancer Research. on November 15, 2020. © 2017 American Association for cancerdiscovery.aacrjournals.org Downloaded from

The Path of Most Resistance: Transdifferentiation ... · The Path of Most Resistance: Transdifferentiation Underlies exceptional nonresponses to Androgen Receptor Pathway Inhibition

  • Upload
    others

  • View
    6

  • Download
    0

Embed Size (px)

Citation preview

Page 1: The Path of Most Resistance: Transdifferentiation ... · The Path of Most Resistance: Transdifferentiation Underlies exceptional nonresponses to Androgen Receptor Pathway Inhibition

VIeWS

july 2017 CANCER DISCOVERY | 673

IN THE SPOTLIGHT

The Path of Most Resistance: Transdifferentiation Underlies exceptional nonresponses to Androgen Receptor Pathway Inhibition in Prostate Cancer Seema Sinha and Peter S. Nelson

Divisions of Human Biology and Clinical Research, Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center, Seattle, Washington. Corresponding Author: Peter S. Nelson , Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center, Mail Stop D4-100, 1100 Fairview Avenue N, Seattle, WA 98109. Phone: 206-667-3377; Fax: 206-667-2917; E-mail: [email protected] doi: 10.1158/2159-8290.CD-17-0481 ©2017 American Association for Cancer Research.

Summary: In this issue of Cancer Discovery , Zou and colleagues describe a mechanism involving cellular transdif-ferentiation that promotes exceptional resistance to antiandrogen therapy in prostate cancer. A background of coinactivation of Trp53 and Pten increased the frequency of the transdifferentiated neuroendocrine phenotype. These fi ndings have implications for developing approaches to repress cellular plasticity and overcome treat-ment resistance. Cancer Discov; 7(7); 673–4. ©2017 AACR.

See related article by Zou et al., p. 736 (3).

Metastatic prostate cancer is a lethal disease. Since the 1950s, the treatment of advanced prostate cancer has focused on inhibiting the activity of the androgen receptor (AR), which functions as a lineage oncogene to maintain the sur-vival and growth of malignant prostate cells. Although initial responses to AR inhibition are nearly universal, so is the eventual development of resistance progressing to a clinical state broadly defi ned as castration-resistant prostate cancer (CRPC). The emergence of CRPC is usually accompanied by reactivation of AR signaling, which is then retargeted using agents such as abiraterone and enzalutamide that inhibit key mechanisms serving to maintain AR pathway activity ( 1 ). Unfortunately, resistance to these agents is essentially universal, but in this setting, the mechanisms appear to be more varied and can involve cellular programs that obviate the need for AR activity. One notable resistance pathway involves the acquisition of histopathologic features that dis-tinguish small-cell and neuroendocrine carcinomas (NEPC). The mechanism(s) responsible for the transition from an AR-dependent tumor to one with neuroendocrine character-istics remains poorly understood, but appears to fi t within the parameters that defi ne the process of metaplasia and, more specifi cally, transdifferentiation: the conversion of one differentiated cell type into another differentiated cell type without undergoing a pluripotent cell transition ( 2 ). Under-standing this process may lead to important insights that can be exploited to circumvent the development of this highly lethal cancer subtype.

In the current article, Zou and colleagues sought to ascer-tain mechanisms that contribute to the development of resistance to AR pathway targeting ( 3 ). Previous studies have

identifi ed genomic aberrations that are enriched in CRPCs, including copy loss or mutation in several well-studied tumor suppressors: RB1 , TP53 , and PTEN ( 4 ). These alterations are further enriched in NEPC compared with those CRPCs that maintain features of adenocarcinomas in which AR signaling is active ( 5 ). To evaluate these molecular aberrations in the context of therapy, Zou and colleagues fi rst constructed geneti-cally engineered mouse (GEM) models designed to inactivate the tumor suppressors Nkx3.1 and Pten ( NP GEM) with or without the combined loss of Trp53 ( NPp53 GEM) specifi cally in mouse prostate luminal epithelium. Both models devel-oped adenocarcinomas, and, following androgen deprivation, both models progressed to CRPC with an adenocarcinoma phenotype. Notably, following further AR pathway repression with abiraterone, the models exhibited divergent responses: The growth of NP CRPCs was signifi cantly inhibited, whereas NPp53 CRPCs were refractory to abiraterone, and, in a subset, tumor growth accelerated. These tumors were classifi ed as “exceptional nonresponders.” Metastases were also identifi ed in several abiraterone-treated NPp53 GEM mice, whereas metasta-ses were not identifi ed in those treated with a vehicle.

Histopathologic assessment of the CRPCs revealed that NPp53 tumors exhibited a range of histologies, including several with small-cell/NEPC characteristics, which were most commonly observed following abiraterone treatment. These latter tumors were highly proliferative, lacked AR expression, and exhibited gene expression profi les concord-ant with those observed in human NEPC. Although most prevalent in the NPp53 tumors treated with abiraterone, regions of neoplastic cells without adenocarcinoma features were identifi ed in tumors that had not been exposed to abi-raterone or androgen deprivation treatment, suggesting that preexisting tumor cells lacking Pten and Trp53 are primed to resist therapy. Extrapolating these fi ndings across species leads to the testable hypothesis that patients with PTEN/TP53 –defi cient tumors may resist abiraterone and potentially other AR-directed therapeutics and consequently also exhibit “exceptional nonresponder” phenotypes.

Central to the question of how AR-positive prostate ade-nocarcinomas evolve to a therapy-resistant neuroendocrine

Cancer Research. on November 15, 2020. © 2017 American Association forcancerdiscovery.aacrjournals.org Downloaded from

Page 2: The Path of Most Resistance: Transdifferentiation ... · The Path of Most Resistance: Transdifferentiation Underlies exceptional nonresponses to Androgen Receptor Pathway Inhibition

Views

674 | CANCER DISCOVERY july 2017 www.aacrjournals.org

phenotype is defining their cell of origin. NEPC could arise from a benign neuroendocrine precursor cell that directly undergoes malignant transformation. Alternatively, NEPC may diverge from a common adenocarcinoma precursor or exhibit linear progression through phenotypic states poten-tially driven by sequential genomic alterations (5). To address this issue, Zou and colleagues devised an elegant lineage-tracing strategy to permanently mark, with a yellow fluores-cent protein (YFP), prostate luminal epithelial cells in NPp53 GEM mice. Using synaptophysin as a marker for neuroendo-crine differentiation, they found that synaptophysin-positive cells within NPp53 tumors were positive for YFP. These results provide direct in vivo evidence that NEPC is derived from luminal epithelium and supports transdifferentiation as a key process leading to the neuroendocrine phenotype, although the studies do not completely rule out a transition through a dedifferentiated intermediary stem cell–like state before acquiring neuroendocrine characteristics.

Recent studies have begun to shed light on key drivers of neuroendocrine differentiation that include the involve-ment of developmental transcription factors such as SOX2 that serve to influence self-renewal and pluripotency, and epigenetic modifiers such as EZH2 that influence embryonic development and cell proliferation (6, 7). In this context, Zou and colleagues found that Sox11, a member of the SOXC subclass of HMG-box transcriptional regulators, was upregulated in treatment-resistant NPp53 tumors. SOX11 is a pan-neuronal differentiation factor that regulates neural and mesenchymal progenitors during organogenesis. The repres-sion of Sox11 diminished neuroendocrine markers, includ-ing synaptophysin, without changes in Sox2 expression. The known functions of SOX2 and SOX11 suggested a develop-mental pathway whereby initial SOX2 upregulation serves to promote cell plasticity, which then allows for SOX11-driven induction of a neuroendocrine program.

Overall, the findings reported by Zou and colleagues are timely and have clear clinical implications. As targeted thera-pies are increasingly successful in impairing key cellular survival pathways that also function to maintain lineage characteristics, tumor cells appear to be able to jettison their original forms and adopt new attributes. Consequently, the frequency of NEPC is likely to rise as AR pathway repression becomes more effective, an event that will necessitate the development of new treatment approaches. Although tumors deficient in RB1 and TP53 are known to have a predilection for acquiring neuroendocrine features, the current studies determined that tumors with the combination of PTEN and TP53 loss also have this ability. The status of these tumor

suppressors may serve as predictive biomarkers of response, or lack of response, to targeted agents. It is notable that transdifferentiation to a neuroendocrine phenotype is not a treatment resistance mechanism unique to prostate cancer: Carcinoma of the lung and other tumor types have been shown to adopt neural and neuroendocrine characteristics under therapeutic pressure (8). The profound alterations that occur in these transdifferentiated cells strongly impli-cate widespread epigenetic changes that serve to reprogram entire genomes and support the investigation of agents that are capable of targeting epigenetic modifications that include inhibitors of EZH2, histone deacetylases, methylation, and BET proteins. The preclinical models developed in the con-text of the current study provide ideal systems to evaluate these agents.

Disclosure of Potential Conflicts of InterestNo potential conflicts of interest were disclosed.

Grant SupportThis work was supported by funding from NIH/NCI grants

CA097186 and CA163227, CDMRP award PC140794, and the Pros-tate Cancer Foundation.

Published online July 6, 2017.

RefeRenCeS1. Nelson PS. Molecular states underlying androgen receptor activation:

a framework for therapeutics targeting androgen signaling in prostate cancer. J Clin Oncol 2012;30:644–6.

2. Tosh D, Slack JM. How cells change their phenotype. Nat Rev Mol Cell Biol 2002;3:187–94.

3. Zou M, Toivanen R, Mitrofanova A, Floch N, Hayati S, Sun Y, et  al. Transdifferentiation as a mechanism of treatment resistance in a mouse model of castration-resistant prostate cancer. Cancer Discov 2017;7:736–49.

4. Robinson D, Van Allen EM, Wu YM, Schultz N, Lonigro RJ, Mosquera JM, et  al. Integrative clinical genomics of advanced prostate cancer. Cell 2015;161:1215–28.

5. Beltran H, Prandi D, Mosquera JM, Benelli M, Puca L, Cyrta J, et  al. Divergent clonal evolution of castration-resistant neuroendocrine prostate cancer. Nat Med 2016;22:298–305.

6. Mu P, Zhang Z, Benelli M, Karthaus WR, Hoover E, Chen CC, et  al. SOX2 promotes lineage plasticity and antiandrogen resistance in TP53- and RB1-deficient prostate cancer. Science 2017;355:84–8.

7. Ku SY, Rosario S, Wang Y, Mu P, Seshadri M, Goodrich ZW, et al. Rb1 and Trp53 cooperate to suppress prostate cancer lineage plasticity, metastasis, and antiandrogen resistance. Science 2017;355:78–83.

8. Sequist LV, Waltman BA, Dias-Santagata D, Digumarthy S, Turke AB, Fidias P, et  al. Genotypic and histological evolution of lung cancers acquiring resistance to EGFR inhibitors. Sci Transl Med 2011;3:75ra26.

Cancer Research. on November 15, 2020. © 2017 American Association forcancerdiscovery.aacrjournals.org Downloaded from

Page 3: The Path of Most Resistance: Transdifferentiation ... · The Path of Most Resistance: Transdifferentiation Underlies exceptional nonresponses to Androgen Receptor Pathway Inhibition

2017;7:673-674. Cancer Discov   Seema Sinha and Peter S. Nelson  Inhibition in Prostate CancerExceptional Nonresponses to Androgen Receptor Pathway The Path of Most Resistance: Transdifferentiation Underlies

  Updated version

  http://cancerdiscovery.aacrjournals.org/content/7/7/673

Access the most recent version of this article at:

   

   

  Cited articles

  http://cancerdiscovery.aacrjournals.org/content/7/7/673.full#ref-list-1

This article cites 8 articles, 5 of which you can access for free at:

   

  E-mail alerts related to this article or journal.Sign up to receive free email-alerts

  SubscriptionsReprints and

  [email protected] at

To order reprints of this article or to subscribe to the journal, contact the AACR Publications

  Permissions

  Rightslink site. (CCC)Click on "Request Permissions" which will take you to the Copyright Clearance Center's

.http://cancerdiscovery.aacrjournals.org/content/7/7/673To request permission to re-use all or part of this article, use this link

Cancer Research. on November 15, 2020. © 2017 American Association forcancerdiscovery.aacrjournals.org Downloaded from