The objective of the program project is to develop a novel mechanism-driven strategy for prostate cancer prevention. The approach is based on suppressing androgen signal transduction at two different steps simultaneously by using finasteride to inhibit the formation of dihydrotestosterone and selenium to reduce androgen receptor (AR) expression. The program is built along a bench-to-bedside paradigm and consists of three highly integrated projects. Project 1 is to delineate how finasteride and selenium work cooperatively to modulate certain molecular events in controlling the clonal expansion of prostate cancer cells. Special emphasis is placed on the functional analysis of key targets and pathways responsible for the induction of apoptosis following treatment with finasteride/selenium. Microenvironmental hypoxia is frequently seen in a colony of proliferating cancer cells due to abnormalities of the vasculature. It is well known that hypoxia produces a variety of molecular changes as a selective pressure for survival. There is recent evidence suggesting that hypoxia facilitates AR activation and the transcription of androgen-responsive genes. The above process is mediated by a redox-regulating protein called peroxiredoxin-1, or Prx1. Prx1 is preferentially elevated in prostatic intraepithelial neoplasia and prostate cancer cells. Project 2 is to investigate the mechanism of hypoxia/Prxl stimulation of AR signaling and to assess the role of Prx1 in modifying the cancer control efficacy of finasteride/selenium. The findings of Projects 1 and 2 are critical to the interpretation of the clinical trial results of Project 3. A short-term intervention trial is proposed to verify the effect of finasteride/selenium on androgen target gene expression and apoptosis induction in prostate tissue samples obtained from pre-prostatectomy patients. A second objective of the trial is to determine whether a high level of Prx1 diminishes the sensitivity to finasteride/selenium intervention. Every year, approximately 230,000 new cases of prostate cancer are diagnosed in the US, and some 30,000 men will die of this disease. As a public health problem, prostate cancer engenders huge medical care and human suffering costs. Blocking the progression of small volume, low-grade neoplasia is increasingly being recognized as an important aspect of prostate cancer control. Our goal is to find a way of managing the disease at an early stage in order to prevent it from becoming clinical relevant.

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Cancer Institute (NCI)
Type
Research Program Projects (P01)
Project #
5P01CA126804-04
Application #
8135363
Study Section
Special Emphasis Panel (ZCA1)
Project Start
Project End
Budget Start
2010-09-01
Budget End
2011-08-31
Support Year
4
Fiscal Year
2010
Total Cost
$93,884
Indirect Cost
Name
Roswell Park Cancer Institute Corp
Department
Type
DUNS #
824771034
City
Buffalo
State
NY
Country
United States
Zip Code
14263
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Payne Ondracek, Rochelle; Cheng, Jinrong; Gangavarapu, Kalyan J et al. (2015) Impact of devascularization and tissue procurement on cell number and RNA integrity in prostatectomy tissue. Prostate 75:1910-5
Fiandalo, Michael V; Wu, Wenjie; Mohler, James L (2013) The role of intracrine androgen metabolism, androgen receptor and apoptosis in the survival and recurrence of prostate cancer during androgen deprivation therapy. Curr Drug Targets 14:420-40
Chhipa, Rishi Raj; Halim, Danny; Cheng, Jinrong et al. (2013) The direct inhibitory effect of dutasteride or finasteride on androgen receptor activity is cell line specific. Prostate 73:1483-94
Wu, Yue; Godoy, Alejandro; Azzouni, Faris et al. (2013) Prostate cancer cells differ in testosterone accumulation, dihydrotestosterone conversion, and androgen receptor signaling response to steroid 5?-reductase inhibitors. Prostate 73:1470-82
Wu, Yue; Chhipa, Rishi Raj; Zhang, Haitao et al. (2011) The antiandrogenic effect of finasteride against a mutant androgen receptor. Cancer Biol Ther 11:902-9
Chhipa, Rishi Raj; Wu, Yue; Ip, Clement (2011) AMPK-mediated autophagy is a survival mechanism in androgen-dependent prostate cancer cells subjected to androgen deprivation and hypoxia. Cell Signal 23:1466-72
Zhang, Haitao; Fang, Jian; Yao, Dian et al. (2010) Activation of FOXO1 is critical for the anticancer effect of methylseleninic acid in prostate cancer cells. Prostate 70:1265-73
Cheng, Jinrong; Wu, Yue; Mohler, James L et al. (2010) The transcriptomics of de novo androgen biosynthesis in prostate cancer cells following androgen reduction. Cancer Biol Ther 9:1033-42

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