Increasing Stemness Drives Prostate Cancer Progression, Plasticity, Therapy Resistance and Poor Patient Survival

bioRxiv [Preprint]. 2025 Jun 5:2025.04.27.650697. doi: 10.1101/2025.04.27.650697.

Abstract

Cancer progression involves loss of differentiation and acquisition of stem cell-like traits, broadly referred to as "stemness". Here, we test whether the level of stemness, assessed by a transcriptome-derived Stemness score, can quantitatively track prostate cancer (PCa) development, progression, therapy resistance, metastasis, plasticity, and patient survival. Integrative analysis of transcriptomic data from 87,183 samples across 26 datasets reveals a progressive increase in Stemness and decline in pro-differentiation androgen receptor activity (AR-A) along the PCa continuum, with metastatic castration-resistant PCa (mCRPC) exhibiting the highest Stemness and lowest AR-A. Both the general Stemness score and a newly developed 12-gene "PCa-Stem Signature" correlate with and predict poor clinical outcomes. Mechanistically, increased AR-A may promote Stemness in early-stage PCa while MYC amplification and bi-allelic RB1 loss likely drive greatly elevated Stemness in mCRPC where AR-A is suppressed. Our findings establish Stemness as a robust quantitative measure of PCa aggressiveness and offer a scalable framework for PCa risk stratification.

Keywords: AR signaling; Prostate cancer; aggressiveness; heterogeneity; plasticity; stemness.

Publication types

  • Preprint