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[Preprint]. 2023 Dec 1:2023.12.01.23299215.
doi: 10.1101/2023.12.01.23299215.

Genomic and epigenomic analysis of plasma cell-free DNA identifies stemness features associated with worse survival in AR -altered lethal prostate cancer

Genomic and epigenomic analysis of plasma cell-free DNA identifies stemness features associated with worse survival in AR -altered lethal prostate cancer

Pradeep S Chauhan et al. medRxiv. .

Update in

Abstract

Metastatic castration-resistant prostate cancer (mCRPC) resistant to androgen receptor (AR)-targeted agents is often lethal. Unfortunately, biomarkers for this deadly disease remain under investigation, and underpinning mechanisms are ill-understood. Here, we applied deep sequencing to ∼100 mCRPC patients prior to the initiation of first-line AR-targeted therapy, which detected AR /enhancer alterations in over a third of patients, which correlated with lethality. To delve into the mechanism underlying why these patients with cell-free AR /enhancer alterations developed more lethal prostate cancer, we next performed genome-wide cell-free DNA epigenomics. Strikingly, we found that binding sites for transcription factors associated with developmental stemness were nucleosomally more accessible. These results were corroborated using cell-free DNA methylation data, as well as tumor RNA sequencing from a held-out cohort of mCRPC patients. Thus, we validated the importance of AR /enhancer alterations as a prognostic biomarker in lethal mCRPC, and showed that the underlying mechanism for lethality involves reprogramming developmental states toward increased stemness.

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