Understanding how sex hormones maintain tissue integrity--and how their disruption can promote cancer--is a central question in biology. In the prostate, androgen signaling is crucial for development, homeostasis, and cancer, yet the molecular mechanisms underlying tissue regression after androgen-deprivation have remained unknown. Here we show that castration induces epithelial regression via ferroptosis in the normal mouse and human prostate, as well as in prostate tumors. Using in vivo analyses in genetically-engineered mice, supported by validation in human organotypic cultures, we demonstrate that androgen receptor (AR) signaling controls castration response through two distinct pathways: an intrinsic luminal epithelial pathway regulated by the prostate-specific transcription factor NKX3.1, and an extrinsic stromal signal mediated by the secreted factor pleiotrophin (PTN). Together, these AR signaling pathways coordinately regulate biosynthesis of monounsaturated fatty acid (MUFA) phospholipids and GPX4 expression to suppress prostate epithelial ferroptosis. Our findings reveal a sex hormone-regulated ferroptotic program that governs tissue homeostasis and suggest that ferroptosis induction could represent a new therapeutic strategy for prostate cancer.
来源出处
Dual pathway regulation of castration response and ferroptosis in the prostat…
https://www.biorxiv.org/content/10.1101/2025.08.06.668974v1?rss=1