Our lab studies the biology of advanced prostate cancer and mechanisms of therapeutic resistance.
A major focus of our recent research is on androgen receptor splice variants(AR-Vs) in castration-resistant prostate cancers. Work from my lab established the requirement of dimerization for AR-Vs to mediate resistance of prostate cancer to endocrine therapy, highlighting disrupting AR-V dimerization as a viable approach to inhibit AR-V signaling for prostate cancer treatment. We also revealed a clinically relevant mechanism of increased AR-V expression after endocrine therapy. We found that accumulation of AR-Vs is inevitable after endocrine therapy due to increased transcription of the AR gene, faster AR-FL protein decay, and efficient AR-V translation. This is vital to understanding the clinical significance of AR-Vs.
Another area of our research focus is on how intrachromosomal TMPRSS2-ERG gene fusion impacts prostate cancer disease progression. TMPRSS2-ERG gene fusion is one of the most frequent genetic alterations in prostate cancer. We found that the fusion perse may not be as important as the loss of the interstitial genes located between TMPRSS2 and ERG, such as FAM3B (Family With Sequence Similarity 3Member B), for prostate cancer disease progression. We showed that FAM3Bworks as an intermediator of a self-governing AR feedback loop. Specifically, AR upregulates FAM3B expression by binding to an intronic enhancer to induce an enhancer-RNA and facilitate enhancer-promoter looping. FAM3B, in turn, attenuates AR signaling. Loss of FAM3B in prostate cancer causes an exit from this autoregulatory loop to unleash AR activity and prostate cancer progression. Our work demonstrates the functional significance of gene loss dueto intrachromosomal fusion events in cancer biology. This is a largely understudied area of investigation.
ORCID identifier: 0000-0003-1622-5354
MyNCBI Link: http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/sites/myncbi/yan.dong.2/bibliography/40318696/public/?sort=date&direction=ascending
Selected Publications:
Editorial: Emmanuel S. Antonarakis and Jun Luo. (2015) AR splicevariant dimerization - clinical implications Nature Reviews Urology, 12,431-433.
Topics (Keywords/Tags): prostate cancer, androgen receptor, therapy resistance, TMPRSS2-ERG translocation