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Opposing transcriptional programs of KLF5 and AR emerge during therapy for advanced prostate cancer.

Nature communications (2021-11-06)
Meixia Che, Aashi Chaturvedi, Sarah A Munro, Samuel P Pitzen, Alex Ling, Weijie Zhang, Josh Mentzer, Sheng-Yu Ku, Loredana Puca, Yanyun Zhu, Andries M Bergman, Tesa M Severson, Colleen Forster, Yuzhen Liu, Jacob Hildebrand, Mark Daniel, Ting-You Wang, Luke A Selth, Theresa Hickey, Amina Zoubeidi, Martin Gleave, Rohan Bareja, Andrea Sboner, Wayne Tilley, Jason S Carroll, Winston Tan, Manish Kohli, Rendong Yang, Andrew C Hsieh, Paari Murugan, Wilbert Zwart, Himisha Beltran, R Stephanie Huang, Scott M Dehm
RESUMEN

Endocrine therapies for prostate cancer inhibit the androgen receptor (AR) transcription factor. In most cases, AR activity resumes during therapy and drives progression to castration-resistant prostate cancer (CRPC). However, therapy can also promote lineage plasticity and select for AR-independent phenotypes that are uniformly lethal. Here, we demonstrate the stem cell transcription factor Krüppel-like factor 5 (KLF5) is low or absent in prostate cancers prior to endocrine therapy, but induced in a subset of CRPC, including CRPC displaying lineage plasticity. KLF5 and AR physically interact on chromatin and drive opposing transcriptional programs, with KLF5 promoting cellular migration, anchorage-independent growth, and basal epithelial cell phenotypes. We identify ERBB2 as a point of transcriptional convergence displaying activation by KLF5 and repression by AR. ERBB2 inhibitors preferentially block KLF5-driven oncogenic phenotypes. These findings implicate KLF5 as an oncogene that can be upregulated in CRPC to oppose AR activities and promote lineage plasticity.