A mechanism for hormone-independent prostate cancer through modulation of androgen receptor signaling by the HER-2/neu tyrosine kinase

N Craft, Y Shostak, M Carey, CL Sawyers - Nature medicine, 1999 - nature.com
N Craft, Y Shostak, M Carey, CL Sawyers
Nature medicine, 1999nature.com
Prostate cancer progresses from a hormone-sensitive, androgen-dependent stage to a
hormone-refractory, androgen-independent tumor. The androgen receptor pathway
functions in these androgen-independent tumors despite anti-androgen therapy. In our
LAPC-4 prostate cancer model, androgen-independent sublines expressed higher levels of
the HER-2/neu receptor tyrosine kinase than their androgen-dependent counterparts.
Forced overexpression of HER-2/neu in androgen-dependent prostate cancer cells allowed …
Abstract
Prostate cancer progresses from a hormone-sensitive, androgen-dependent stage to a hormone-refractory, androgen-independent tumor. The androgen receptor pathway functions in these androgen-independent tumors despite anti-androgen therapy. In our LAPC-4 prostate cancer model, androgen-independent sublines expressed higher levels of the HER-2/neu receptor tyrosine kinase than their androgen-dependent counterparts. Forced overexpression of HER-2/neu in androgen-dependent prostate cancer cells allowed ligand-independent growth. HER-2/neu activated the androgen receptor pathway in the absence of ligand and synergized with low levels of androgen to'superactivate'the pathway. By modulating the response to low doses of androgen, a tyrosine kinase receptor can restore androgen receptor function to prostate cancer cells, a finding directly related to the clinical progression of prostate cancer.
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