Convergent evolution of p38/MAPK activation in hormone resistant prostate cancer mediates pro-survival, immune evasive, and metastatic phenotypes

  • Kathryn E. Ware ,
  • Santosh Gupta ,
  • Jared Eng ,
  • Gabor Kemeny ,
  • Bhairavy J. Puviindran ,
  • Wen-Chi Foo ,
  • ,
  • R. Garland Almquist ,
  • Daniella Runyambo ,
  • Beatrice C. Thomas ,
  • Maya U. Sheth ,
  • Anika Agarwal ,
  • Mariaelena Pierobon ,
  • Emanuel F. Petricoin ,
  • David L. Corcoran ,
  • Jennifer Freedman ,
  • Steven R. Patierno ,
  • Tian Zhang ,
  • Simon Gregory ,
  • Zoi Sychev ,
  • Justin M. Drake ,
  • Andrew J. Armstrong ,
  • Jason A. Somarelli

bioRxiv |

Adaptation of cancer cells to targeted therapy follows ecological paradigms observed in natural populations that encounter resource depletion and changing environments, including activation of pro-survival mechanisms, migration to new locations, and escape of predation. We identified the p38 MAPK pathway as a common molecular driver of these three responses during the adaptation to hormone therapy resistance in prostate cancer. The p38 pathway is activated in therapy-resistant cells and mechanistically drives these three convergent responses through sustained AR activity, enhanced invasion and metastasis, and immune evasion. Targeting p38 signaling may represent a new therapeutic strategy to treat men with metastatic, hormone therapy-resistant prostate cancer.