Publication Date:
2018
abstract:
Patients with prostate cancer frequently show resistance to androgen-deprivation therapy, a condition known as castration-resistant prostate cancer (CRPC). Acquiring a better understanding of the mechanisms that control the development of CRPC remains an unmet clinical need. The well-established dependency of cancer cells on the tumour microenvironment indicates that the microenvironment might control the emergence of CRPC. Here we identify IL-23 produced by myeloid-derived suppressor cells (MDSCs) as a driver of CRPC in mice and patients with CRPC. Mechanistically, IL-23 secreted by MDSCs can activate the androgen receptor pathway in prostate tumour cells, promoting cell survival and proliferation in androgen-deprived conditions. Intra-tumour MDSC infiltration and IL-23 concentration are increased in blood and tumour samples from patients with CRPC. Antibody-mediated inactivation of IL-23 restored sensitivity to androgen-deprivation therapy in mice. Taken together, these results reveal that MDSCs promote CRPC by acting in a non-cell autonomous manner. Treatments that block IL-23 can oppose MDSC-mediated resistance to castration in prostate cancer and synergize with standard therapies.
Iris type:
1.1 Articolo in rivista
List of contributors:
Calcinotto, Arianna; Spataro, Clarissa; Zagato, Elena; Di Mitri, Diletta; Gil, Veronica; Crespo, Mateus; De Bernardis, Gaston; Losa, Marco; Mirenda, Michela; Pasquini, Emiliano; Rinaldi, Andrea; Sumanasuriya, Semini; Lambros, Maryou B; Neeb, Antje; Lucianò, Roberta; Bravi, Carlo A; Nava-Rodrigues, Daniel; Dolling, David; Prayer-Galetti, Tommaso; Ferreira, Ana; Briganti, Alberto; Esposito, Antonio; Barry, Simon; Yuan, Wei; Sharp, Adam; de Bono, Johann; Alimonti, Andrea
Published in: