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Data from β2-adrenoreceptor Signaling Increases Therapy Resistance in Prostate Cancer by Upregulating MCL1

Authors :
George Kulik
Waldemar Debinski
Urs von Holzen
Ashok Hemal
Ralph D'Agostino
Young A. Choi
Yue Huang
Guangchao Sui
Sinan Zhu
Daniele Baiz
Yelena Karpova
Anabel Flores
Kyle C. Nelson
Ashok Pullikuth
Sazzad Hassan
Publication Year :
2023
Publisher :
American Association for Cancer Research (AACR), 2023.

Abstract

There is accumulating evidence that continuous activation of the sympathetic nervous system due to psychosocial stress increases resistance to therapy and accelerates tumor growth via β2-adrenoreceptor signaling (ADRB2). However, the effector mechanisms appear to be specific to tumor type. Here we show that activation of ADRB2 by epinephrine, increased in response to immobilization stress, delays the loss of MCL1 apoptosis regulator (MCL1) protein expression induced by cytotoxic drugs in prostate cancer cells; and thus, increases resistance of prostate cancer xenografts to cytotoxic therapies. The effect of epinephrine on MCL1 protein depended on protein kinase A (PKA) activity, but was independent from androgen receptor expression. Furthermore, elevated blood epinephrine levels correlated positively with an increased MCL1 protein expression in human prostate biopsies. In summary, we demonstrate that stress triggers an androgen-independent antiapoptotic signaling via the ADRB2/PKA/MCL1 pathway in prostate cancer cells.Implications:Presented results justify clinical studies of ADRB2 blockers as therapeutics and of MCL1 protein expression as potential biomarker predicting efficacy of apoptosis-targeting drugs in prostate cancer.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........80c5b6b33e58667e3d74e3ead11c999b
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1158/1541-7786.c.6541105