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Integrated control of cancer stemness by σ receptor in advanced prostate cancer.

Oncogene 2025 Vol.44(42) p. 4032-4046

Civenni G, Sandrini G, Merulla J, Musumeci C, Federici E, Vallegra A, Kokanovic A, Mosole S, Shinde D, Sorrenti E, Paganoni AJJ, Marchetti M, Valzelli R, Albino D, Pecoraro M, Rinaldi A, Bolis M, Geiger R, Winge T, Holtschulte C, Laurini E, Pricl S, Carbone GM, Wünsch B, Catapano CV

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Cancer stem cells (CSCs) are pervasively present in human cancers and have a fundamental role in treatment failure and disease recurrence.

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APA Civenni G, Sandrini G, et al. (2025). Integrated control of cancer stemness by σ receptor in advanced prostate cancer.. Oncogene, 44(42), 4032-4046. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41388-025-03541-7
MLA Civenni G, et al.. "Integrated control of cancer stemness by σ receptor in advanced prostate cancer.." Oncogene, vol. 44, no. 42, 2025, pp. 4032-4046.
PMID 40897798

Abstract

Cancer stem cells (CSCs) are pervasively present in human cancers and have a fundamental role in treatment failure and disease recurrence. Identifying critical elements that sustain the CSC phenotype may lead to novel strategies for cancer treatment. Here, we provide evidence of an essential link between the σ receptor (σR), a ligand-regulated chaperone protein residing preferentially at the endoplasmic reticulum-mitochondria contact sites, and CSCs in castration-resistant prostate cancers (CRPCs). Integrating functional assays in multiple preclinical models with transcriptomic and proteomic data, we found that σR controls CSC self-renewal capacity and tumorigenic proficiency by coordinating mitochondrial dynamics and mitochondrial-nuclear signaling. Inhibiting σR with synthetic antagonists and RNA interference led to the progressive exhaustion and loss of tumorigenicity of the CSC progeny. Mechanistically, interfering with σR function disrupted mitochondria homeostasis and triggered β-catenin degradation. Examining clinical CRPC samples, we found a tight correlation between σR and mitochondrial gene expression. Furthermore, σR and β-catenin protein levels were highly correlated in prostate tumors with significant upregulation in metastatic CRPCs, sustaining a role of the σR-mitochondria-β-catenin axis in disease progression. This σR-centered axis is essential for preserving the self-renewal and tumorigenic capability of CSCs and represents a critical vulnerability exploitable for discovering novel CSC-directed therapies.

MeSH Terms

Male; Humans; Receptors, sigma; Neoplastic Stem Cells; Animals; Mice; Cell Line, Tumor; Prostatic Neoplasms, Castration-Resistant; Sigma-1 Receptor; Mitochondria; beta Catenin; Gene Expression Regulation, Neoplastic; Signal Transduction; Prostatic Neoplasms