作者
Ping Mu,Zeda Zhang,Matteo Benelli,Wouter R. Karthaus,Elizabeth Hoover,Chi-Chao Chen,John Wongvipat,Sheng‐Yu Ku,Dong Gao,Zhen Cao,Neel Shah,Elizabeth Adams,Wassim Abida,Philip A. Watson,Davide Prandi,Chun‐Hao Huang,Elisa de Stanchina,Scott W. Lowe,Leigh Ellis,Himisha Beltran,Mark A. Rubin,David W. Goodrich,Francesca Demichelis,Charles L. Sawyers
摘要
Evading cancer drugs by identity fraud Prostate cancer growth is fueled by male hormones called androgens. Drugs targeting the androgen receptor (AR) are initially efficacious, but most tumors eventually become resistant (see the Perspective by Kelly and Balk). Mu et al. found that prostate cancer cells escaped the effects of androgen deprivation therapy through a change in lineage identity. Functional loss of the tumor suppressors TP53 and RB1 promoted a shift from AR-dependent luminal epithelial cells to AR-independent basal-like cells. In related work, Ku et al. found that prostate cancer metastasis, lineage switching, and drug resistance were driven by the combined loss of the same tumor suppressors and were accompanied by increased expression of the epigenetic regulator Ezh2. Ezh2 inhibitors reversed the lineage switch and restored sensitivity to androgen deprivation therapy in experimental models. Science , this issue p. 84 , p. 78 ; see also p. 29