Molecular and Cellular Mechanisms of Cancers: Prostate Cancer 2020

A special issue of Cells (ISSN 2073-4409). This special issue belongs to the section "Cellular Pathology".

Deadline for manuscript submissions: closed (31 December 2020) | Viewed by 379

Special Issue Editors


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Guest Editor
Laboratory of Radiobiology, Department of Applied Clinical Sciences and Biotechnologies, University of l'Aquila, 67100 L'Aquila, Italy
Interests: prostate cancer
Special Issues, Collections and Topics in MDPI journals

E-Mail Website
Guest Editor
Division of Radiotherapy, Department of Applied Clinical Sciences and Biotechnologies, University of L’Aquila, L’Aquila, Italy
Interests: cancer biology; apoptosis; oncology; cancer cells; prostate cancer; radiation oncology; radiotherapy; oncogenes; cancer stem cells
Special Issues, Collections and Topics in MDPI journals

Special Issue Information

Dear Colleagues,

Prostate cancer (PCa) incidence has been dramatically increasing these last few years in industrialized Western countries. The androgen receptor (AR) plays a central role in the pathogenesis of this disease. Unfortunately, most PCa patients go into an androgen-independent stage named castration-resistant prostate cancer (CRPC) in which AR-signaling still is active. This more aggressive state of disease, in the vast majority of cases, leads to questions about the molecular mechanisms involved in tumor recurrence. Though localized PCa is usually treated by radical prostatectomy, androgen deprivation therapy (ADT) is preferred in locally advanced disease in combination with chemotherapy.

Inhibition of AR remains, however, a well-established promising drug target in CRPC. However, in spite of the improvements in current treatment for CRPC by targeting the AR, the evolution of adaptive AR signaling leads to therapy-resistant CRPC. Treatment failure is based mostly on the inability to keep AR under long-term restraint due to adaptive responses of AR signaling. One underlying mechanism appears to be the increased AR protein stability. Therefore, regulation of AR protein stability and its degradation is another interesting path that could enhance our knowledge of carcinogenesis and tumor evolution, possibly leading to novel therapeutic targets

The main focus of this Special Issue will be the evaluation of molecular pathways as pharmacological targets for treatment strategies that may improve the management of biological aggressive and resistant CRPCs. This Special Issue will provide a platform for all pharmaceutical and translational scientists to learn important breakthroughs in drug discovery and new therapeutics in this field.

Potential topics include, but are not limit to, those listed below.

  1. Molecular alterations associated with prostate cancer
    • Androgen receptor—effectiveness and resistance to current pharmacological anti AR approaches;
    • Targeting mutated ARs and/or splicing variants;
    • Epigenetic regulation of AR expression—methylation and histone acetylation/deacetylation status, as well as AR protein stability, as targets for the therapy of CRPC and chemotherapy-resistant prostate cancers; and
    • Intra-prostatic androgen synthesis as target for treatment of aggressive/CRPCs (i.e., inhibitors of cytochrome P450 enzyme CYP17, 17α-hydroxylase and 17,20-lyase, as well as AKR1C3).
  2. Metabolic alterations and PCa progressioncellular constituents of the prostate stroma—key contributors to prostate cancer progression and therapy resistance
    • Obesity and mesenchymal stem cells—key players in prostate cancer progression;
    • Lipid synthesis and metabolism, i.e., fatty acid synthase (FASN) and AMACR;
    • Glutathione metabolism—γ-glutamylcyclotransferase (GGCT);
    • Stroma–cancer cell interactions and hypoxia—stromal niche for epithelial stem cells; and
    • Tumor-associated macrophage activation.
  3. Castration-resistant metastatic disease (mCRPC)
    • Epithelial-to-mesenchymal transition (EMT);
    • VEGF antagonists and VEGFR inhibitors; and
    • Antagonists of integrins (avb3, avb5, a5b1, etc.) and bone metastases.
  4. Mechanisms and strategies to overcome resistance to radiotherapy or pharmacologic chemotherapy
    • Radio-sensitizing agents;
    • Modulators of intracellular trafficking of proteins and mRNA;
    • Antagonists of cell recruitment (monocytes and granulocytes, bone marrow myeloid cells, PCa stem-like cells);
    • CXCR4/CXCR7 antagonists;
    • Ephrin/ephrin receptor antagonists or inhibitors; and
    • P21 activated kinases (PAKs)
  5. Inflammation and NF-κB Signaling in Prostate Cancer—Mechanisms and Clinical Implications
  6. Immunomodulators
    • Immune checkpoint-mediated interactions between cancer and immune
    • cells.
  7. Natural compounds

Prof. Claudio Festuccia
Dr. Francesco Marampon
Guest Editors

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