Switch from antagonist to agonist of the androgen receptor blocker bicalutamide is associated with prostate tumour progression in a new model system
Open Access
- 27 August 1999
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Springer Nature in British Journal of Cancer
- Vol. 81 (2) , 242-251
- https://doi.org/10.1038/sj.bjc.6690684
Abstract
Advanced prostate cancer is treated by androgen ablation and/or androgen receptor (AR) antagonists. In order to investigate the mechanisms relevant to the development of therapy-resistant tumours, we established a new tumour model which closely resembles the situation in patients who receive androgen ablation therapy. Androgen-sensitive LNCaP cells were kept in androgen-depleted medium for 87 passages. The new LNCaP cell subline established in this manner, LNCaP-abl, displayed a hypersensitive biphasic proliferative response to androgen until passage 75. Maximal proliferation of LNCaP-abl cells was achieved at 0.001 nM of the synthetic androgen methyltrienolone (R1881), whereas 0.01 nM of this compound induced the same effect in parental cells. At later passages (> 75), androgen exerted an inhibitory effect on growth of LNCaP-abl cells. The non-steroidal anti-androgen bicalutamide stimulated proliferation of LNCaP-abl cells. AR protein expression in LNCaP-abl cells increased approximately fourfold. The basal AR transcriptional activity was 30-fold higher in LNCaP-abl than in LNCaP cells. R1881 stimulated reporter gene activity in LNCaP-abl cells even at 0.01 nM, whereas 0.1 nM of R1881 was needed for induction of the same level of reporter gene activity in LNCaP cells. Bicalutamide that acts as a pure antagonist in parental LNCaP cells showed agonistic effects on AR transactivation activity in LNCaP-abl cells and was not able to block the effects of androgen in these cells. The non-steroidal AR blocker hydroxyflutamide exerted stimulatory effects on AR activity in both LNCaP and LNCaP-abl cells; however, the induction of reporter gene activity by hydroxyflutamide was 2.4- to 4-fold higher in the LNCaP-abl subline. The changes in AR activity were associated neither with a new alteration in AR cDNA sequence nor with amplification of the AR gene. Growth of LNCaP-abl xenografts in nude mice was stimulated by bicalutamide and repressed by testosterone. In conclusion, our results show for the first time that the non-steroidal anti-androgen bicalutamide acquires agonistic properties during long-term androgen ablation. These findings may have repercussions on the natural course of prostate cancer with androgen deprivation and on strategies of therapeutic intervention.Keywords
This publication has 48 references indexed in Scilit:
- Androgen Receptor Gene Mutations in Prostate CancerDrugs & Aging, 1997
- Activation of androgen receptor in epidermal growth factor modulation of fetal mouse sexual differentiationMolecular and Cellular Endocrinology, 1996
- Inhibitory effects of the nucleoside analogue gemcitabine on prostatic carcinoma cellsThe Prostate, 1996
- Mutation of the Androgen-Receptor Gene in Metastatic Androgen-Independent Prostate CancerNew England Journal of Medicine, 1995
- In vivo amplification of the androgen receptor gene and progression of human prostate cancerNature Genetics, 1995
- Optimizing comparative genomic hybridization for analysis of DNA sequence copy number changes in solid tumorsGenes, Chromosomes and Cancer, 1994
- Hormone-induced dissociation of the androgen receptor-heat-shock protein complex: use of a new monoclonal antibody to distinguish transformed from nontransformed receptorsBiochemistry, 1992
- Androgen receptors in endocrine‐therapy‐resistant human prostate cancerInternational Journal of Cancer, 1991
- A mutation in the ligand binding domain of the androgen receptor of human INCaP cells affects steroid binding characteristics and response to anti-androgensBiochemical and Biophysical Research Communications, 1990
- Regulation of growth and epidermal growth factor receptor levels of LNCaP prostate tumor cells by different steroidsInternational Journal of Cancer, 1988