| Literature DB >> 28756516 |
Gayathri Srinivasan1, Gurjit Singh Sidhu1, Elizabeth A Williamson1, Aruna S Jaiswal1, Nasreen Najmunnisa1, Keith Wilcoxen2, Dennie Jones1, Thomas J George3, Robert Hromas4.
Abstract
Malignant pleural mesotheliomas (MPM) are most often surgically unresectable, and they respond poorly to current chemotherapy and radiation therapy. Between 23 and 64% of malignant pleural mesothelioma have somatic inactivating mutations in the BAP1 gene. BAP1 is a homologous recombination (HR) DNA repair component found in the BRCA1/BARD1 complex. Similar to BRCA1/2 deficient cancers, mutation in the BAP1 gene leads to a deficient HR pathway and increases the reliance on other DNA repair pathways. We hypothesized that BAP1-mutant MPM would require PARP1 for survival, similar to the BRCA1/2 mutant breast and ovarian cancers. Therefore, we used the clinical PARP1 inhibitors niraparib and olaparib to assess whether they could induce synthetic lethality in MPM. Surprisingly, we found that all MPM cell lines examined, regardless of BAP1 status, were addicted to PARP1-mediated DNA repair for survival. We found that niraparib and olaparib exposure markedly decreased clonal survival in multiple MPM cell lines, with and without BAP1 mutations. This clonal cell death may be due to the extensive replication fork collapse and genomic instability that PARP1 inhibition induces in MPM cells. The requirement of MPM cells for PARP1 suggests that they may generally arise from defects in HR DNA repair. More importantly, these data demonstrate that the PARP1 inhibitors could be effective in the treatment of MPM, for which little effective therapy exists.Entities:
Keywords: BAP1; Homologous recombination; Mesothelioma; Niraparib; Olaparib; PARP1
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28756516 PMCID: PMC5608777 DOI: 10.1007/s00280-017-3401-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cancer Chemother Pharmacol ISSN: 0344-5704 Impact factor: 3.288
Fig. 1PARP1 inhibition is lethal to MPM cells. Colony formation assays of clonal cell survival with continuous niraparib or olaparib, both at 3 uM. a H2452 BPA1-mutant MPM cells exposed to niraparib. b HMeso01A BAP1-mutant MPM cells exposed to niraparib. c HMeso01A BAP1-mutant MPM cells exposed to olaparib. d CRL-2081 BAP1 wild-type MPM cells exposed to olaparib. e CRL-2081 BAP1 wild-type MPM cells exposed to niraparib. f Dose response of H2452 BPA1-mutant MPM cells exposed to varying concentrations of niraparib. For all figures: * indicates a p value of 0.01, ** of 0.001, *** of 0.0001 and **** of < 0.0001
Fig. 2Replication fork and genomic instability in MPM cells after exposure to niraparib. a BRDU incorporation assays assessing replication fork repair and restart demonstrating poor fork restart after niraparib exposure in H2452 MPM cells. b Confocal immunofluorescence of γ-H2Ax foci demonstrating a marked increase in replication fork structural damage after niraparib exposure in H2452 cells. c Genomic instability in BAP1-mutant mesothelioma cells after exposure to niraparib. Confocal immunofluorescence of DAPI-stained H2452 nuclei after exposure to niraparib demonstrated a significant increase in micronuclei and post-mitotic nuclear bridging. d Sister chromatid exchange (SCE) assays showing a marked increase in SCE after release from niraparib exposure in H2452 cells