Modulating Androgen Receptor-Driven Transcription in Prostate Cancer with Selective CDK9 Inhibitors
Author(s)
Richters, André; Doyle, Shelby K.; Freeman, David B.; Lee, Christina; Leifer, Becky S.; Jagannathan, Sajjeev; Kabinger, Florian; Koren, Jošt Vrabič; Struntz, Nicholas B.; Urgiles, Julie; Stagg, Ryan A.; Curtin, Brice H.; Chatterjee, Deep; Mathea, Sebastian; Mikochik, Peter J.; Hopkins, Tamara D.; Gao, Hua; Branch, Jonathan R.; Xin, Hong; Westover, Lori; Bignan, Gilles C.; Rupnow, Brent A.; Karlin, Kristen L.; Olson, Calla M.; Westbrook, Thomas F.; Vacca, Joseph; Wilfong, Chris M.; Trotter, B. Wesley; Saffran, Douglas C.; Bischofberger, Norbert; Knapp, Stefan; Russo, Joshua W.; Hickson, Ian; Bischoff, James R.; Gottardis, Marco M.; Balk, Steven P.; Lin, Charles Y.; Pop, Marius S.; Koehler, Angela N.; ... Show more Show less
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© 2020 The Authors Castration-resistant prostate cancers (CRPCs) lose sensitivity to androgen-deprivation therapies but frequently remain dependent on oncogenic transcription driven by the androgen receptor (AR) and its splice variants. To discover modulators of AR-variant activity, we used a lysate-based small-molecule microarray assay and identified KI-ARv-03 as an AR-variant complex binder that reduces AR-driven transcription and proliferation in prostate cancer cells. We deduced KI-ARv-03 to be a potent, selective inhibitor of CDK9, an important cofactor for AR, MYC, and other oncogenic transcription factors. Further optimization resulted in KB-0742, an orally bioavailable, selective CDK9 inhibitor with potent anti-tumor activity in CRPC models. In 22Rv1 cells, KB-0742 rapidly downregulates nascent transcription, preferentially depleting short half-life transcripts and AR-driven oncogenic programs. In vivo, oral administration of KB-0742 significantly reduced tumor growth in CRPC, supporting CDK9 inhibition as a promising therapeutic strategy to target AR dependence in CRPC. In the pursuit of hormone receptor modulators in prostate cancer, a potent, ultraselective CDK9 inhibitor is discovered. This study describes the most selective inhibitors of CDK9 known to date and provides compelling preclinical in vitro and in vivo support for CDK9 as a therapeutic target.
Date issued
2021-02Department
Koch Institute for Integrative Cancer Research at MIT; Center for Precision Cancer Medicine; Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Department of Biological Engineering; Harvard University--MIT Division of Health Sciences and TechnologyJournal
Cell Chemical Biology
Publisher
Elsevier BV
ISSN
2451-9456