You are here

Splicing factor TRA2B enhances synthesis of androgen receptor variant AR-V7 in prostate cancer cells

Authors: 
Brittain N, Paschalis A, Nelson R, Adamson B, Walker L, Duncan R, Smith GR, McGill S, Burchmore RJ, Bogdan D, Jiménez-Vacas JM, Welti J, Yuan W, Robson CN, Rescigno P, Luzzi S, Sharp A, de Bono J, Gaughan L
Citation: 
J Clin Invest. 2026 Apr 1;136(7):e198264. doi: 10.1172/JCI198264. PMID: 41919500; PMCID: PMC13038199
Abstract: 
Treatment of locally advanced and metastatic prostate cancer (PC) with androgen receptor-targeting (AR-targeting) therapies has limited durability, with disease eventually progressing to castrate-resistant PC (CRPC). Constitutively active AR splice variants (AR-Vs), such as AR-V7, play a key role in driving treatment resistance and disease progression. Importantly, the failure to attenuate AR-V function represents a major unmet clinical need, and as such, defining how AR-Vs are generated is likely to yield new therapeutic targets. Our knowledge of factors that mediate splicing of AR-V-encoding mRNAs remains limited. Here, we have employed an RNA-targeting CasRx approach to identify selective protein interactors of AR-V7 mRNA in PC. TRA2B and its ortholog, TRA2A, were identified as splicing regulators of AR transcripts that facilitate AR-V synthesis at the expense of full-length AR isoforms. TRA2B expression correlated with AR-V7 transcript in CRPC and attenuation of TRA2-mediated splicing diminished PC cell growth. Exploiting TRA2B function may therefore provide new therapeutic opportunities in advanced disease.
Epub: 
Not Epub
Organism or Cell Type: 
CWR22Rv1 cells