Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
2196221 | Molecular and Cellular Endocrinology | 2013 | 13 Pages |
Prostate cancer growth depends on androgens. Synthetic antiandrogens are used in the cancer treatment. However, antiandrogens, such as bicalutamide (BIC), have a mixed agonist/antagonist activity. Here we compare the antiandrogenic capacity of BIC to a new antiandrogen, MDV3100 (MDV) or Enzalutamide™. By reconstitution of a hormone-regulated enhancer in Xenopus oocytes we show that both antagonists trigger the androgen receptor (AR) translocation to the nucleus, albeit with a reduced efficiency for MDV. Once in the nucleus, both AR-antagonist complexes can bind sequence specifically to DNA in vivo. The forkhead box transcription factor A (FoxA1) is a negative prognostic indicator for prostate cancer disease. FoxA1 expression presets the enhancer chromatin and makes the DNA more accessible for AR binding. In this context the BIC-AR antiandrogenic effect is seriously compromised as demonstrated by a significant chromatin remodeling and induction of a robust MMTV transcription whereas the MDV-AR complex displays a more persistent antagonistic character.
► The effect of bicalutamide is corrupted by FoxA1 while that of MDV3100 is reduced. ► MDV3100-AR complex binds specifically to the androgen response elements in vivo. ► Antagonists trigger AR nuclear translocation albeit with a reduced efficiency for MDV. ► Reduced chromatin remodeling correlates with the antiandrogenic effect on transcription. ► FoxA1 chromatin presetting attenuates the effect of antiandrogens.