Person: Lis, Rosina
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Publication A co-clinical approach identifies mechanisms and potential therapies for androgen deprivation resistance in prostate cancer
(2013) Lunardi, Andrea; Ala, Ugo; Epping, Mirjam T.; Salmena, Leonardo; Clohessy, John; Webster, Kaitlyn A.; Wang, Guocan; Mazzucchelli, Roberta; Bianconi, Maristella; Stack, Edward C.; Lis, Rosina; Patnaik, Akash; Cantley, Lewis C.; Bubley, Glenn; Cordon-Cardo, Carlos; Gerald, William L.; Montironi, Rodolfo; Signoretti, Sabina; Loda, Massimo; Nardella, Caterina; Pandolfi, Pier PaoloHere we report an integrated analysis that leverages data from treatment of genetic mouse models of prostate cancer along with clinical data from patients to elucidate new mechanisms of castration resistance. We show that castration counteracts tumor progression in a Pten-loss driven mouse model of prostate cancer through the induction of apoptosis and proliferation block. Conversely, this response is bypassed upon deletion of either Trp53 or Lrf together with Pten, leading to the development of castration resistant prostate cancer (CRPC). Mechanistically, the integrated acquisition of data from mouse models and patients identifies the expression patterns of XAF1-XIAP/SRD5A1 as a predictive and actionable signature for CRPC. Importantly, we show that combined inhibition of XIAP, SRD5A1, and AR pathways overcomes castration resistance. Thus, our co-clinical approach facilitates stratification of patients and the development of tailored and innovative therapeutic treatments.
Publication The androgen receptor cistrome is extensively reprogrammed in human prostate tumorigenesis
(2015) Pomerantz, Mark; Li, Fugen; Takeda, David; Lenci, Romina; Chonkar, Apurva; Chabot, Matthew; Cejas, Paloma; Vazquez, Francisca; Cook, Jennifer; Shivdasani, Ramesh; Bowden, Michaela; Lis, Rosina; Hahn, William; Kantoff, Philip; Brown, Myles; Loda, Massimo; Long, Henry; Freedman, MatthewMaster transcription factors interact with DNA to establish cell-type identity and to regulate gene expression in mammalian cells1,2. The genome-wide map of these transcription factor binding sites has been termed the cistrome3. Here we show that the androgen receptor (AR) cistrome undergoes extensive reprogramming during prostate epithelial transformation in man. Using human prostate tissue, we observed a core set of AR binding sites that are consistently reprogrammed in tumors. FOXA1 and HOXB13, co-localized with the reprogrammed AR sites in human tumor tissue. Introduction of FOXA1 and HOXB13 into an immortalized prostate cell line reprogrammed the AR cistrome to resemble that of a prostate tumor, functionally linking these specific factors to AR reprogramming. These findings offer mechanistic insights into a key set of events that drive normal prostate epithelium towards transformation and establish the centrality of epigenetic reprogramming in human prostate tumorigenesis.
Publication Stromal and epithelial transcriptional map of initiation progression and metastatic potential of human prostate cancer
(Nature Publishing Group UK, 2017) Tyekucheva, Svitlana; Bowden, Michaela; Bango, Clyde; Giunchi, Francesca; Huang, Ying; Zhou, Chensheng; Bondi, Arrigo; Lis, Rosina; Van Hemelrijck, Mieke; Andrén, Ove; Andersson, Sven-Olof; Watson, R. William; Pennington, Stephen; Finn, Stephen P.; Martin, Neil; Stampfer, Meir; Parmigiani, Giovanni; Penney, Kathryn; Fiorentino, Michelangelo; Mucci, Lorelei; Loda, MassimoWhile progression from normal prostatic epithelium to invasive cancer is driven by molecular alterations, tumor cells and cells in the cancer microenvironment are co-dependent and co-evolve. Few human studies to date have focused on stroma. Here, we performed gene expression profiling of laser capture microdissected normal non-neoplastic prostate epithelial tissue and compared it to non-transformed and neoplastic low-grade and high-grade prostate epithelial tissue from radical prostatectomies, each with its immediately surrounding stroma. Whereas benign epithelium in prostates with and without tumor were similar in gene expression space, stroma away from tumor was significantly different from that in prostates without cancer. A stromal gene signature reflecting bone remodeling and immune-related pathways was upregulated in high compared to low-Gleason grade cases. In validation data, the signature discriminated cases that developed metastasis from those that did not. These data suggest that the microenvironment may influence prostate cancer initiation, maintenance, and metastatic progression.