Ovarian cancer (OVCA) inevitably acquires resistance to platinum chemotherapy and PARP inhibitors (PARPi). We show that acquisition of PARPi-resistance is accompanied by increased ATR-CHK1 activity and sensitivity to ATR inhibition (ATRi). However, PARPi-resistant cells are remarkably more sensitive to ATRi when combined with PARPi (PARPi-ATRi). Sensitivity to PARPi-ATRi in diverse PARPi and platinum-resistant models, including BRCA1/2 reversion and CCNE1 -amplified models, correlate with synergistic increases in replication fork stalling, double-strand breaks, and apoptosis. Surprisingly, BRCA reversion mutations and an ability to form RAD51 foci are frequently not observed in models of acquired PARPi-resistance, suggesting the existence of alternative resistance mechanisms. However, regardless of the mechanisms of resistance, complete and durable therapeutic responses to PARPi-ATRi that significantly increase survival are observed in clinically relevant platinum and acquired PARPi-resistant patient-derived xenografts (PDXs) models. These findings indicate that PARPi-ATRi is a highly promising strategy for OVCAs that acquire resistance to PARPi and platinum.
Summary CCNE1 -amplified ovarian cancers (OVCAs) and endometrial cancers (EMCAs) are associated with platinum resistance and poor survival, representing a clinically unmet need. We hypothesized that dysregulated cell-cycle progression promoted by CCNE1 overexpression would lead to increased sensitivity to low-dose WEE1 inhibition and ataxia telangiectasia and Rad3-related (ATR) inhibition (WEE1i-ATRi), thereby optimizing efficacy and tolerability. The addition of ATRi to WEE1i is required to block feedback activation of ATR signaling mediated by WEE1i. Low-dose WEE1i-ATRi synergistically decreases viability and colony formation and increases replication fork collapse and double-strand breaks (DSBs) in a CCNE1 copy number (CN)-dependent manner. Only upon CCNE1 induction does WEE1i perturb DNA synthesis at S-phase entry, and addition of ATRi increases DSBs during DNA synthesis. Inherent resistance to WEE1i is overcome with WEE1i-ATRi, with notable durable tumor regressions and improved survival in patient-derived xenograft (PDX) models in a CCNE1 -level-dependent manner. These studies demonstrate that CCNE1 CN is a clinically tractable biomarker predicting responsiveness to low-dose WEE1i-ATRi for aggressive subsets of OVCAs/EMCAs.
Aims Since the sclerosing stromal tumour (SST) of the ovary was first described in 1973, few studies have expanded upon its histological features or overlap with other tumours. We thus investigate these aspects based on our experience with 100 cases. Methods and results The patients, 14 of whom were pregnant, ranged from 12 to 63 years (median = 26 years). Ten patients had hormonal manifestations (seven oestrogenic, three androgenic). Bilateral ovarian involvement was present in two cases. Size ranged from 1 to 23 cm (mean = 8.4 cm). Most tumours were solid and white with focal yellow areas; oedema with cystic degeneration (seen in 25 cases) resulted in eight being predominantly cystic. On microscopic examination, alternating cellular and paucicellular areas (pseudolobulation) were prominent in 94 cases but seen to a limited degree in the remaining neoplasms. Admixed spindled and luteinised cells were present in all tumours, but 13 demonstrated mainly spindled cells and 19 demonstrated mainly lutein cells; 14 of the latter were from pregnant patients. The stroma was typically oedematous or collagenous, but in 14 cases was prominently hyalinised and, in four, myxoid. Prominent vascularity was present in most cases. The mitotic rate ranged from 0 to 8/10 high‐power fields (HPF), but most demonstrated <1/10 HPF. Conclusions The differential diagnosis of SST is broad, including fibromas, thecomas, solitary fibrous tumours, pregnancy luteomas, myxomas, other ovarian sex cord‐stromal tumours with sclerosis and, rarely, Krukenberg tumours. Strict adherence to the requirement of pseudolobulation, prominent (usually ectatic) vessels, and lutein cells and fibroblasts admixed in a jumbled manner, will distinguish the neoplasm from others in the differential.
Massive formalin-fixed, paraffin-embedded (FFPE) tissue archives exist worldwide, representing an invaluable resource for clinical proteomics research. However, current protocols for FFPE proteomics lack standardization, efficiency, reproducibility, and scalability. Here we present high-yield protein extraction and recovery by direct solubilization (HYPERsol), an optimized workflow using ultrasonication and S-Trap sample processing that enables proteome coverage and quantification from FFPE samples comparable to that achieved from flash-frozen tissue (average R = 0.936). When applied to archival samples, HYPERsol resulted in high-quality data from FFPE specimens in storage for up to 17 years, and may enable the discovery of new immunohistochemical markers.
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