| Literature DB >> 31480716 |
Xing Bian1,2,3, Wenchu Lin4,5.
Abstract
Small cell lung cancer (SCLC), accounting for about 15% of all cases of lung cancer worldwide, is the most lethal form of lung cancer. Despite an initially high response rate of SCLC to standard treatment, almost all patients are invariably relapsed within one year. Effective therapeutic strategies are urgently needed to improve clinical outcomes. Replication stress is a hallmark of SCLC due to several intrinsic factors. As a consequence, constitutive activation of the replication stress response (RSR) pathway and DNA damage repair system is involved in counteracting this genotoxic stress. Therefore, therapeutic targeting of such RSR and DNA damage repair pathways will be likely to kill SCLC cells preferentially and may be exploited in improving chemotherapeutic efficiency through interfering with DNA replication to exert their functions. Here, we summarize potentially valuable targets involved in the RSR and DNA damage repair pathways, rationales for targeting them in SCLC treatment and ongoing clinical trials, as well as possible predictive biomarkers for patient selection in the management of SCLC.Entities:
Keywords: DSD repair; replication stress response; small cell lung cancer; therapeutic strategy
Year: 2019 PMID: 31480716 PMCID: PMC6770306 DOI: 10.3390/cancers11091289
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cancers (Basel) ISSN: 2072-6694 Impact factor: 6.639
Figure 1Causes of replication stress in small cell lung cancer (SCLC) cells. A number of endogenous obstacles that lead to replication stress in SCLC, including inactivation of tumor suppressors RB1 and p53, as well as amplification of MYC family genes. RB1 loss or amplification of MYC family genes promotes G0-G1 cell cycle entry, p53 mutation leads to deficient G1/S DNA damage checkpoint.
Figure 2The DNA damage response network in SCLC cells. (A) The roles of the ATR-CHK1 signaling cascade in response to replication stress, replication protein A (RPA) is first loaded onto long stretches of single-strand DNA (ssDNA). The ATR was then recruited to the ssDNA sites through interaction with ATRIP. Once activated, ATR-mediated activation of CHK1 then transmits signals of replication stress through multiple mechanisms. (B) Once persistent replication stress cannot be fixed, replication forks then collapse into double-strand breaks (DSBs). In response to DSBs, SCLC cancer cells activate two major DSB repair pathways: Homologous recombination (HR) and non-homologous end joining (NHEJ). Crucial proteins involved in the HR repair pathway include BRCA1/2, CHK1/2, RAD51, ATM, etc.; the core components of the NHEJ repair pathway comprise KU70/80, XRCC4, DNA-PK, etc. Thus, constitutive activation of the replication stress response (RSR) pathway and DSB repair system is crucial for maintaining SCLC cell survival.
Figure 3The rationales for targeting RSR and DSB repair in SCLC. (A) In normal cells, an elegant balance between the endogenous replication stress and competent DNA damage response pathway maintains genome integrity. (B) In SCLC cells, targeting RSR leads to intolerable replication stress (RS), thus leading lethal RS levels and DSBs that cannot be fixed by SCLC cells. Similarly, perturbation of DSB repair system results in compromised DNA damage repair and lethal DSBs that cannot be fixed by SCLC cells. Red arrow indicates an increase of DSBs.