Abstract
Androgen deprivation therapy (ADT) remains the standard treatment for advanced prostate cancer (PCa); however, most patients ultimately progress to lethal castration-resistant PCa (CRPC). Emerging evidence implicates RNA N⁶-methyladenosine (m⁶A) modification as a key regulator of cancer biology, yet its role in CRPC remains poorly understood. As a critical adaptor in the m⁶A methyltransferase complex, RNA-binding motif protein 15 (RBM15) directs m⁶A deposition to specific mRNA targets. Here, we identified RBM15 as the key methyltransferase member significantly upregulated in CRPC tissues and strongly correlated with poor patient survival. Functionally, RBM15 overexpression reduces PCa cell sensitivity to enzalutamide, whereas its knockdown suppresses tumor growth and invasion. Mechanistically, RBM15 is an androgen-responsive protein whose expression increases upon chronic androgen deprivation. It catalyzes m⁶A methylation at position A1384 of damaged DNA binding protein 1 (DDB1) mRNA, leading to YTHDF2-dependent transcript decay and reduced DDB1 protein levels. Lower DDB1 impairs K48-linked polyubiquitination of the androgen receptor (AR), thereby stabilizing AR and amplifying AR signaling. Importantly, AR transcriptionally activates RBM15, forming a feed-forward loop that drives CRPC progression. Collectively, our findings establish RBM15 as a central epitranscriptomic driver of CRPC and identify the RBM15-DDB1-AR axis as a promising therapeutic target. Dual inhibition of RBM15 and AR may offer a novel strategy to overcome treatment resistance in advanced PCa.