| Literature DB >> 31146482 |
Leanne de Koning1, Didier Decaudin2,3, Rania El Botty4, André Nicolas5, Guillaume Carita6, Mathieu Schuller7, Bérengère Ouine8, Aurélie Cartier9, Adnan Naguez10, Justine Fleury11, Vesselina Cooke12, Andrew Wylie13, Paul Smith14, Elisabetta Marangoni15, David Gentien16, Didier Meseure17, Pascale Mariani18, Nathalie Cassoux19, Sophie Piperno-Neumann20, Sergio Roman-Roman21, Fariba Némati22.
Abstract
Uveal melanoma (UM) remains without effective therapy at the metastatic stage, which is associated with BAP-1 (BRCA1 associated protein) mutations. However, no data on DNA repair capacities in UM are available. Here, we use UM patient-derived xenografts (PDXs) to study the therapeutic activity of the PARP inhibitor olaparib, alone or in combination. First, we show that the expression and the activity of PARP proteins is similar between the PDXs and the corresponding patient's tumors. In vivo experiments in the PDX models showed that olaparib was not efficient alone, but significantly increased the efficacy of dacarbazine. Finally, using reverse phase protein arrays and immunohistochemistry, we identified proteins involved in DNA repair and apoptosis as potential biomarkers predicting response to the combination of olaparib and dacarbazine. We also observed a high increase of phosphorylated YAP and TAZ proteins after dacarbazine + olaparib treatment. Our results suggest that PARP inhibition in combination with the alkylating agent dacarbazine could be of clinical interest for UM treatment. We also observe an interesting effect of dacarbazine on the Hippo pathway, confirming the importance of this pathway in UM.Entities:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31146482 PMCID: PMC6628115 DOI: 10.3390/cancers11060751
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cancers (Basel) ISSN: 2072-6694 Impact factor: 6.639
Figure 1PARP protein expression in UM patients (P0) and their corresponding PDXs at various in vivo passages (P1, P4, and P9) as measured by RPPA. Boxplots represent the distribution of data of all PDX models together. Boxes contain 50% of values, upper brackets contain the 25% highest values, lower brackets contain the 25% lowest values. Black lines: median; dots: outliers. P0, patient’s tumor; P1, first in vivo passage; P4, fourth in vivo passage; P9, ninth in vivo passage.
Figure 2Waterfall plots of response to olaparib-based therapies. Upper p values correspond to statistical differences between olaparib compared to each other tested treatment; p values at the bottom correspond to statistical differences between each tested treatment compared to its combination with olaparib (χ2 test).
Figure 3Combination of olaparib and dacarbazine. (A) Growth curves of all treated models. (B–E) ORR of the four experimental groups, i.e., control (black), olaparib (blue), dacarbazine (dark green), and olaparib + dacarbazine (light green), respectively. RTV: Relative tumor variation. mRTVc: median relative tumor volume of the corresponding control group (F–G). Probability of progression of the four experimental groups: doubling time (F) and quadrupling time (G).
Figure 4Venn diagram of the proteins significantly (p < 0.01) correlated to response to DTIC alone (blue) (MP55 + MP77 + MM52 versus MM33), olaparib alone (green) (MM33 versus MP55 + MP77 M MM52), or the DTIC+ olaparib combination (red) (MP55 + MP77 + MM33 versus MM52) (paired t tests assuming equal variance).
Figure 5Schematic representation of HR- and NHEJ-related protein expression modifications in the two PDXs MP55 and MM52: Olaparib + DTIC versus DTIC. The intensity of color reflects fold change. Red color: higher (phospho-)protein expression in olaparib + DTIC than in DTIC alone. Green color: lower (phospho-)protein expression in olaparib + DTIC than in DTIC alone.
Figure 6TAZ and YAP protein staining in the four treated PDXs by IHC.