Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
2196221 Molecular and Cellular Endocrinology 2013 13 Pages PDF
Abstract

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.

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