| Literature DB >> 24062981 |
Silvana B De Lorenzo1, Anand G Patel, Rachel M Hurley, Scott H Kaufmann.
Abstract
Poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase 1 (PARP1) is an important component of the base excision repair (BER) pathway as well as a regulator of homologous recombination (HR) and non-homologous end-joining (NHEJ). Previous studies have demonstrated that treatment of HR-deficient cells with PARP inhibitors results in stalled and collapsed replication forks. Consequently, HR-deficient cells are extremely sensitive to PARP inhibitors. Several explanations have been advanced to explain this so-called synthetic lethality between HR deficiency and PARP inhibition: (i) reduction of BER activity leading to enhanced DNA double-strand breaks, which accumulate in the absence of HR; (ii) trapping of inhibited PARP1 at sites of DNA damage, which prevents access of other repair proteins; (iii) failure to initiate HR by poly(ADP-ribose) polymer-dependent BRCA1 recruitment; and (iv) activation of the NHEJ pathway, which selectively induces error-prone repair in HR-deficient cells. Here we review evidence regarding these various explanations for the ability of PARP inhibitors to selectively kill HR-deficient cancer cells and discuss their potential implications.Entities:
Keywords: BRCA1; BRCA2; PARP inhibitor; breast cancer; homologous recombination; non-homologous end joining; ovarian cancer; synthetic lethality
Year: 2013 PMID: 24062981 PMCID: PMC3769628 DOI: 10.3389/fonc.2013.00228
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Oncol ISSN: 2234-943X Impact factor: 6.244
Figure 1A simplified model for NHEJ and HR. When a DNA double-strand break (DSB) occurs during G1, it is repaired via NHEJ (right). This process involves the following steps: (1) the Ku70/80 heterodimer detects and binds to the DSB; (2) Ku70/80 bound to the DSB recruits DNA-PKcs; (3) DNA-PKcs undergoes autophosphorylation, favoring the processing of DNA ends by Artemis; and (4) the XRCC4/DNA ligase IV complex ligates the processed DNA ends. Additional details regarding NHEJ can be found in refs (109–111). In contrast, when a DSB occurs during the S and G2 phases of the cell cycle, repair occurs preferentially via the HR pathway (left), which involves the following steps: (1) PARP1 binds to the DSB (48) and competes with Ku binding to DNA ends (67); (2) the MRN complex is recruited (66) to the DSB (together with CtIP and BRCA1/BARD1) and mediates the initial stages of DSB resection; (3) extensive end resection is catalyzed by EXO1 and DNA2/BLM (79, 80), resulting in long stretches of ssDNA; (4) this ssDNA is coated by RPA; (5) the BRCA2/PALB2/BRCA1 complex facilitates replacement of RPA with Rad51 (73, 81); (6) RAD51 filaments induce strand invasion into homologous DNA sequences; (7) DNA polymerization occurs using the sister chromatid as a template; and (8) resolution of the resulting complexes produces an exact copy of the template where the DSB was generated. Additional details of the HR process can be found in Refs. (60, 72, 73).
Figure 2Four current models of PARP inhibitor-induced cancer cell killing. (A), classical explanation of PARP inhibitor cytotoxicity in HR-deficient cells (124, 125). As described in the text, endogenous DNA damage is thought to result in DNA single-strand breaks, which ordinarily would be repaired by base excision repair (BER). If PARP inhibitors prevent BER, then persistent single-strand breaks are thought to be converted to DNA double-strand breaks, which would be repaired by HR in HR-proficient cells but remain unrepaired in HR-deficient cells. (B) Model emphasizing trapping of inhibited PARP1 at sites of DNA damage. According to this model, PARP1 binds to damaged DNA, synthesizes polymer, and then is released from the DNA so that repair enzymes can bind (51). Building on these observations, this model postulates that PARP inhibition results in failure of PARP1 to dissociate from sites of damage, leading to diminished access of other repair proteins, inhibited repair, and cell death. (C) Model emphasizing impaired recruitment of mutated BRCA1 in the presence of PARP inhibitors. As described by Li and Yu (134), recruitment of BRCA1 to DNA double-strand breaks requires both rapid binding of the BRCA1 binding partner BARD1 to pADPr and subsequent binding of a BRCA1-containing complex to phosphorylated H2AX at the break. Mutations that impair recruitment of the BRCA1-containing complex to phosphorylated H2AX render BRCA1 localization to sites of damage more dependent on the BARD1-pADPr interaction and, therefore, more sensitive to PARP inhibitors. (D), model emphasizing the role of activated NHEJ in PARP inhibitor killing. When DNA double-strand breaks occur, HR preferentially repairs them. In HR-deficient cells, however, double-strand breaks are more frequently repaired by the error-prone NHEJ pathway, resulting in mutations, chromosomal rearrangements, and NHEJ-mediated cell death. PARP inhibitors accelerate this process by removing a brake on NHEJ (116). (A,D) are modified from Patel et al. (116).