Eighty years of targeting androgen receptor activity in prostate cancer: the fight goes on

Publication date

2021-04-06T17:38:38Z

2021-04-06T17:38:38Z

2021-01-29

2021-04-06T17:38:39Z

Abstract

Prostate cancer (PCa) is the most common cancer in men in the West, other than skin cancer, accounting for over a quarter of cancer diagnoses in US men. In a seminal paper from 1941, Huggins and Hodges demonstrated that prostate tumours and metastatic disease were sensitive to the presence or absence of androgenic hormones. The first hormonal therapy for PCa was thus castration. In the subsequent eighty years, targeting the androgen signalling axis, where possible using drugs rather than surgery, has been a mainstay in the treatment of advanced and metastatic disease. Androgens signal via the androgen receptor, a ligand-activated transcription factor, which is the direct target of many such drugs. In this review we discuss the role of the androgen receptor in PCa and how the combination of structural information and functional screenings is continuing to be used for the discovery of new drug to switch off the receptor or modify its function in cancer cells.

Document Type

Article


Published version

Language

English

Publisher

MDPI

Related items

Reproducció del document publicat a: https://doi.org/10.3390/cancers13030509

Cancers, 2021, vol. 3, p. 509

https://doi.org/10.3390/cancers13030509

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Rights

cc-by (c) Estébanez Perpiñá, Eva et al., 2021

http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/es

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