| Literature DB >> 34857952 |
Takahiro Ito1,2,3,4, Michael J Young1, Ruitong Li1, Sidharth Jain1, Andreas Wernitznig1,5, John M Krill-Burger1, Christopher T Lemke1, Davide Monducci1, Diego J Rodriguez1, Liang Chang1,3, Sanjukta Dutta1, Debjani Pal1,2,3, Brenton R Paolella1, Michael V Rothberg1, David E Root1, Cory M Johannessen1,6, Laxmi Parida7, Gad Getz1,3,8, Francisca Vazquez1, John G Doench1, Mahdi Zamanighomi1, William R Sellers9,10,11.
Abstract
Although single-gene perturbation screens have revealed a number of new targets, vulnerabilities specific to frequently altered drivers have not been uncovered. An important question is whether the compensatory relationship between functionally redundant genes masks potential therapeutic targets in single-gene perturbation studies. To identify digenic dependencies, we developed a CRISPR paralog targeting library to investigate the viability effects of disrupting 3,284 genes, 5,065 paralog pairs and 815 paralog families. We identified that dual inactivation of DUSP4 and DUSP6 selectively impairs growth in NRAS and BRAF mutant cells through the hyperactivation of MAPK signaling. Furthermore, cells resistant to MAPK pathway therapeutics become cross-sensitized to DUSP4 and DUSP6 perturbations such that the mechanisms of resistance to the inhibitors reinforce this mechanism of vulnerability. Together, multigene perturbation technologies unveil previously unrecognized digenic vulnerabilities that may be leveraged as new therapeutic targets in cancer.Entities:
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Year: 2021 PMID: 34857952 DOI: 10.1038/s41588-021-00967-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Genet ISSN: 1061-4036 Impact factor: 38.330