Q1 · CROSS-FIELD
Article
Author: Palombella, Vito J. ; Cacciatore, Stefano ; Photopoulos, Cornelia ; Gao, Xueliang ; Butler, Lisa M. ; Ellis, Leigh ; Csibi, Alfredo ; Mahmood, Umar ; D’Anello, Laura ; McGovern, Karen ; Huang, Ying ; Loda, Massimo ; Zadra, Giorgia ; Chetta, Paolo ; Bango, Clyde ; Syamala, Sudeepa ; Dehm, Scott M. ; Tyekucheva, Svitlana ; Bastos, Debora C. ; Tchaicha, Jeremy ; Bosari, Silvano ; Kalekar, Radha ; Lawney, Brian ; Ribeiro, Caroline F. ; Larimer, Benjamin ; Adams, Julian ; Peluso, Stephane ; Uo, Takuma ; Kutok, Jeffery L. ; Morrissey, Colm ; Ho, Yeung ; Plymate, Stephen R.
A hallmark of prostate cancer progression is dysregulation of lipid metabolism via overexpression of fatty acid synthase (FASN), a key enzyme in de novo fatty acid synthesis. Metastatic castration-resistant prostate cancer (mCRPC) develops resistance to inhibitors of androgen receptor (AR) signaling through a variety of mechanisms, including the emergence of the constitutively active AR variant V7 (AR-V7). Here, we developed an FASN inhibitor (IPI-9119) and demonstrated that selective FASN inhibition antagonizes CRPC growth through metabolic reprogramming and results in reduced protein expression and transcriptional activity of both full-length AR (AR-FL) and AR-V7. Activation of the reticulum endoplasmic stress response resulting in reduced protein synthesis was involved in IPI-9119–mediated inhibition of the AR pathway. In vivo, IPI-9119 reduced growth of AR-V7–driven CRPC xenografts and human mCRPC-derived organoids and enhanced the efficacy of enzalutamide in CRPC cells. In human mCRPC, both FASN and AR-FL were detected in 87% of metastases. AR-V7 was found in 39% of bone metastases and consistently coexpressed with FASN. In patients treated with enzalutamide and/or abiraterone FASN/AR-V7 double-positive metastases were found in 77% of cases. These findings provide a compelling rationale for the use of FASN inhibitors in mCRPCs, including those overexpressing AR-V7.