The phosphoinositide 3-kinase-related kinase ATR represents a central checkpoint regulator and mediator of DNA-repair. Its inhibition selectively eliminates certain subsets of cancer cells in various tumor types, but the underlying genetic determinants remain enigmatic. Here, we applied a synthetic lethal screen directed against 288 DNA-repair genes using the well-defined ATR knock-in model of DLD1 colorectal cancer cells to identify potential DNA-repair defects mediating these effects. We identified a set of DNA-repair proteins, whose knockdown selectively killed ATR-deficient cancer cells. From this set, we further investigated the profound synthetic lethal interaction between ATR and POLD1. ATR-dependent POLD1 knockdown-induced cell killing was reproducible pharmacologically in POLD1-depleted DLD1 cells and a panel of other colorectal cancer cell lines by using chemical inhibitors of ATR or its major effector kinase CHK1. Mechanistically, POLD1 depletion in ATR-deficient cells caused caspase-dependent apoptosis without preceding cell cycle arrest and increased DNA-damage along with impaired DNA-repair. Our data could have clinical implications regarding tumor genotype-based cancer therapy, as inactivating POLD1 mutations have recently been identified in small subsets of colorectal and endometrial cancers. POLD1 deficiency might thus represent a predictive marker for treatment response towards ATR- or CHK1-inhibitors that are currently tested in clinical trials.
The phosphoinositide 3-kinase–related kinase ATR is a central regulator of the DNA damage response. Its chemical inhibition eliminates subsets of cancer cells in various tumor types. This effect is caused at least partly by the synthetically lethal relationship between ATR and certain DNA repair genes. In a previous screen using an siRNA library against DNA repair genes, we identified PRIM1, a part of the polymerase α-primase complex, as acting synthetically lethal with ATR. Applying a genetic ATR knock-in model of colorectal cancer cells, we confirmed that PRIM1 depletion inhibited proliferation of ATR-deficient cells and excluded artifacts due to clonal variation using an ATR reexpressing cell clone. We expanded these data by demonstrating in different cell lines that also chemical inhibition of ATR or its main effector kinase CHK1 reduces proliferation upon depletion of PRIM1. Mechanistically, PRIM1 depletion in ATR-deficient cells caused S-phase stasis in the absence of increased DNA damage followed by Wee1-mediated activation of caspase 8 and apoptosis. As PRIM1 inactivation sensitizes cancer cells to ATR and CHK1 inhibitors, mutations in PRIM1 or other components of the polymerase α-primase complex could represent novel targets for individualized tumor therapeutic approaches using ATR/CHK1 inhibitors, as has been previously demonstrated for POLD1, the catalytic subunit of polymerase δ.
Inhibition of the kinase ATR, a central regulator of the DNA damage response, eliminates subsets of cancer cells in certain tumors. As previously shown, this is at least partly attributable to synthetic lethal interactions between ATR and POLD1, the catalytic subunit of the polymerase δ. Various POLD1 variants have been found in colorectal cancer, but their significance as therapeutic targets for ATR pathway inhibition remains unknown. Using CRISPR/Cas9 in the colorectal cancer cell line DLD-1, which harbors four POLD1 variants, we established heterozygous POLD1-knockout clones with exclusive expression of distinct variants to determine the functional relevance of these variants individually by assessing their impact on ATR pathway activation, DNA replication, and cellular sensitivity to inhibition of ATR or its effector kinase CHK1. Of the four variants analyzed, only POLD1R689W affected POLD1 function, as demonstrated by compensatory ATR pathway activation and impaired DNA replication. Upon treatment with ATR or CHK1 inhibitors, POLD1R689W strongly decreased cell survival in vitro, which was attributable at least partly to S phase impairment and apoptosis. Similarly, treatment with the ATR inhibitor AZD6738 inhibited growth of murine xenograft tumors, harboring the POLD1R689W variant, in vivo. Our POLD1-knockout model thus complements algorithm-based models to predict the pathogenicity of tumor-specific variants of unknown significance and illustrates a novel and potentially clinically relevant therapeutic approach using ATR/CHK1 inhibitors in POLD1-deficient tumors.
Glycoproteins of the extracellular matrix (ECM) regulate proliferation, migration, and differentiation in numerous cell lineages. ECM functions are initiated by small peptide sequences embedded in large constituents that are recognized by specific cellular receptors. In this study, we have investigated the biological effects of peptides derived from collagen type IV and tenascin-C compared to the well-known RGD peptide originally discovered in fibronectin. The influence of glycoproteins and corresponding peptides on the migration of the glioma cell lines U-251-MG and U-373-MG and the sarcoma line S-117 was studied. When the cell lines were tested in a modified Boyden chamber assay on filters coated with the ECM glycoproteins, glioma cells showed a strong migration response on tenascin-C and the basal lamina constituent collagen IV, in contrast to S-117 cells. In order to identify relevant stimulatory motifs, peptides derived from fibronectin (6NHX-GRGDSF), tenascin-C (TN-C, VSWRAPTA), and collagen type IV (MNYYSNS) were compared, either applied in solution in combination with ECM glycoprotein substrates, in solution in the presence of untreated membranes, or coated on the filters of the Boyden chambers. Using this strategy, we could identify the novel tenascin-C-derived peptide motif VSWRAPTA as a migration stimulus for glioma cells. Furthermore, while kin peptides generally blocked the effects of the respective homologous ECM proteins, unexpected effects were observed in heterologous situations. There, in several cases, addition of soluble peptides strongly boosted the response to the coated ECM proteins. We propose that peptides may synergize or antagonize each other by stimulating different signaling pathways.
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