Peroxisomal β-oxidation enzyme, DECR2, regulates lipid metabolism and promotes treatment resistance in advanced prostate cancer

Author:

Mah Chui Yan,Nguyen An Dieu Trang,Niijima Takuto,Helm Madison,Dehairs JonasORCID,Ryan Feargal J.ORCID,Ryan Natalie,Quek Lake-Ee,Hoy Andrew J.ORCID,Don Anthony S.,Mills Ian G.,Swinnen Johannes V.ORCID,Lynn David J.ORCID,Nassar Zeyad D.,Butler Lisa M.ORCID

Abstract

Abstract Background Peroxisomes are central metabolic organelles that have key roles in fatty acid homoeostasis. As prostate cancer (PCa) is particularly reliant on fatty acid metabolism, we explored the contribution of peroxisomal β-oxidation (perFAO) to PCa viability and therapy response. Methods Bioinformatic analysis was performed on clinical transcriptomic datasets to identify the perFAO enzyme, 2,4-dienoyl CoA reductase 2 (DECR2) as a target gene of interest. Impact of DECR2 and perFAO inhibition via thioridazine was examined in vitro, in vivo, and in clinical prostate tumours cultured ex vivo. Transcriptomic and lipidomic profiling was used to determine the functional consequences of DECR2 inhibition in PCa. Results DECR2 is upregulated in clinical PCa, most notably in metastatic castrate-resistant PCa (CRPC). Depletion of DECR2 significantly suppressed proliferation, migration, and 3D growth of a range of CRPC and therapy-resistant PCa cell lines, and inhibited LNCaP tumour growth and proliferation in vivo. DECR2 influences cell cycle progression and lipid metabolism to support tumour cell proliferation. Further, co-targeting of perFAO and standard-of-care androgen receptor inhibition enhanced suppression of PCa cell proliferation. Conclusion Our findings support a focus on perFAO, specifically DECR2, as a promising therapeutic target for CRPC and as a novel strategy to overcome lethal treatment resistance.

Funder

Movember Foundation

Cancer Council South Australia

Hospital Research Foundation

Prostate Cancer Foundation of Australia

University of Adelaide

Robinson Fellowship and funding from the University of Sydney

Stichting Tegen Kanker

KU Leuven

EMBL Australia

Cancer Australia

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Subject

Cancer Research,Oncology

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