| Literature DB >> 32295316 |
Naveen Singh1, S Louise Pay1, Snehal B Bhandare1, Udhaya Arimpur1, Edward A Motea1,2.
Abstract
Poly-(ADP-ribose) polymerase 1 (PARP1) is commonly known for its vital role in DNA damage response and repair. However, its enzymatic activity has been linked to a plethora of physiological and pathophysiological transactions ranging from cellular proliferation, survival and death. For instance, malignancies with BRCA1/2 mutations heavily rely on PARP activity for survival. Thus, the use of PARP inhibitors is a well-established intervention in these types of tumors. However, recent studies indicate that the therapeutic potential of attenuating PARP1 activity in recalcitrant tumors, especially where PARP1 is aberrantly overexpressed and hyperactivated, may extend its therapeutic utility in wider cancer types beyond BRCA-deficiency. Here, we discuss treatment strategies to expand the tumor-selective therapeutic application of PARP inhibitors and novel approaches with predictive biomarkers to perturb NAD+ levels and hyperPARylation that inactivate PARP in recalcitrant tumors. We also provide an overview of genetic alterations that transform non-BRCA mutant cancers to a state of "BRCAness" as potential biomarkers for synthetic lethality with PARP inhibitors. Finally, we discuss a paradigm shift for the use of novel PARP inhibitors outside of cancer treatment, where it has the potential to rescue normal cells from severe oxidative damage during ischemia-reperfusion injury induced by surgery and radiotherapy.Entities:
Keywords: DNA repair; NAMPT; NQO1; PARG; PARP Inhibitors; beta-lapachone; cMET; cancer therapeutics
Year: 2020 PMID: 32295316 PMCID: PMC7226473 DOI: 10.3390/cancers12040972
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cancers (Basel) ISSN: 2072-6694 Impact factor: 6.639
Figure 1The role of PARP1 in DNA damage response and repair and cancer therapy. (A) PARP1 binds to single-strand breaks (SSB) for activity to target, recruit and retain critical DNA repair proteins at the sites of DNA lesions. (B) PARP inhibitors convert SSBs to lethal double-stranded breaks (DSBs) that are left unrepaired in BRCA-deficient cells due to a compromised homologous recombination (HR) repair consequently leading to cell death.
Figure 2Pharmacological modulation of PAR ad NAD+ in cancers for therapy. (A) Mechanism of PARthanatos mediated by the translocation of cleaved PAR from the nucleus to the cytosol and mitochondria to induce the release of AIF that translocates into the nucleus to initiate death in PARG-overexpressing cancers. Alternatively, breakdown and recycling of PAR can be prevented by inhibition of PARG to enhance NAD+ depletion caused by PARP hyperactivation, ultimately starving the cell of ATP needed for various critical cellular processes (e.g., DNA repair). (B) In cancer cells that overexpress NAMPT, the use of NAMPT inhibitors interfere with generation of intracellular NAD+ levels that compromise PARP activity, consequently resulting in impaired repair of DNA damage and NAD+-Keresis.
Figure 3Strategy for tumor-selective use of PARP inhibitors in solid tumors. (A) The role of NQO1 in detoxifying certain quinones for cellular efflux. (B) The role of NQO1 in bioactivating certain quinones to induce toxicity in NQO1(+) cancer cells. Note that the stability of hydroquinones determine whether bioreduction by NQO1 leads to detoxification or toxicity. (C) Mechanism of tumor-selective synergistic cell death induced by combination of PARP inhibitor and NQO1-bioactivatable agents in NQO1(+) cells.
Figure 4Attenuation of PARP Activity by cMET inhibition. (A) cMET enhances PARP activity during oxidative stress. Inhibition of cMET is an excellent strategy for inhibiting PARP1-mediated DNA repair and synergy with PARP inhibitors. (B) A snapshot of non-hydrolyzable NAD+ analog (in cyan) bound to residues in PARP1 catalytic active site within 6Å from the ligand (PDB ID: 6 bhv, processed via PyMOL Molecular Graphics System). Phosphorylation of PARP1 residue Y907 (shown in green) inhibits binding of PARP inhibitors.
Figure 5Development of a novel “PARP degrader” molecule as a biochemical probe and therapeutic agent. (A) Chemical structure of Rucaparib. (B) Chemical structure and elements of iRucaparib-AP6. (C) Simplified representation of the mechanism of action for a novel proteolysis targeting chimeric (PROTAC) molecule, iRucaparib-AP6.
Representative list of genes/proteins that have been shown to cause “BRCAness” or HR defect in BRCA-proficient tumors when expression is lost or activity is inhibited. These deficiencies could be exploited as predictive biomarkers for precision treatment with PARP inhibitors.
| Protein Name | Primary Function/Activity | Association with “BRCAness” | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| CDK1 | Cell cycle regulation | Loss of expression or activity inhibition compromises phosphorylation of BRCA1 for proper HR function | [ |
| CDK12/13 | Phosphorylates RNAPII CTD | Loss of expression and activity inhibition suppresses expression of specific HR proteins such as RAD51 and BRCA1 | [ |
| AXL | A receptor tyrosine kinase associated with metastasis, invasion and migration in many cancers | Loss of expression or activity inhibition decreases expression of specific HR genes and proteins | [ |
| Kub5-Hera, RPRD1B, CREPT | Transcription termination factor | Loss of expression compromises HR by decreasing CDK1 expression | [ |
| WEE1 | Involved in the terminal phosphorylation and inactivation of CDK1-bound cyclin B | Activity inhibition with AZD1775 indirectly inhibits BRCA2 | [ |
| UCHL3 | Deubiquitinase | Activity inhibition with perifosine promotes ubiquitination of RAD51 and blocks the binding of RAD51 with BRCA2 | [ |
| BET | Transcriptional regulators | Activity inhibition with JQ1 decreases expression of RAD51 and Ku80 | [ |
| PI3K | Kinase involve in cell growth, proliferation, differentiation, motility, survival and intracellular trafficking | Inhibition of activity impairs BRCA1/2 expression | [ |
| Cyclin D1 | Regulator of CDKs (cyclin dependent kinases), required for cell cycle G1/S transition | Loss of expression impairs recruitment of RAD51 | [ |
| AURKA | Play important role in mitosis/ regulation of cell cycle progression | Activity inhibition or loss of expression decreases expression of BRCA1 and BRCA2 | [ |
| HKMT | Regulation of histone methylation | Inhibition of activity abolishes retention of BRCA1/BARD1 complexes at sites of DSB | [ |
| CCDC6 | Tumor suppressor | Loss of expression compromises BRCC3 and DNA damage checkpoints in response to DNA damage. | [ |
| MEK | Kinase that phosphorylates and activates MAPK | Activity inhibition or loss of expression downregulates BRCA2 | [ |
| HDAC | Removes acetyl groups from an amino acid on a histone | Activity inhibition with SAHA reduces BRCA1 protein levels by targeting the UHRF1/BRCA1 protein complex | [ |
| PAK1 | Regulates cytoskeleton remodeling, phenotypic signaling and gene expression | Reduced activity and loss of expression downregulates the expression of genes involved in FA/BRCA pathway | [ |
| Androgen receptor | DNA-binding transcription factor that regulates gene expression | Activity inhibition or loss of expression suppresses the expression of HR genes, thus creating HR deficiency and BRCAness | [ |
| TGFβ | Involved in embryonic development, cell proliferation, motility and apoptosis, extracellular matrix production, and immunomodulation | Overexpression suppresses BRCA1, ATM, and MSH2 | [ |