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Combined HDAC8 and checkpoint kinase inhibition induces tumor-selective synthetic lethality in preclinical models
Ting-Yu Chang, … , Stanton L. Gerson, Sung-Bau Lee
Ting-Yu Chang, … , Stanton L. Gerson, Sung-Bau Lee
Published October 22, 2024
Citation Information: J Clin Invest. 2024;134(23):e165448. https://doi.org/10.1172/JCI165448.
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Research Article Cell biology

Combined HDAC8 and checkpoint kinase inhibition induces tumor-selective synthetic lethality in preclinical models

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Abstract

The elevated level of replication stress is an intrinsic characteristic of cancer cells. Targeting the mechanisms that maintain genome stability to further increase replication stress and thus induce severe genome instability has become a promising approach for cancer treatment. Here, we identify histone deacetylase 8 (HDAC8) as a drug target whose inactivation synergized with the inhibition of checkpoint kinases to elicit substantial replication stress and compromise genome integrity selectively in cancer cells. We showed that simultaneous inhibition of HDAC8 and checkpoint kinases led to extensive replication fork collapse, irreversible cell-cycle arrest, and synergistic vulnerability in various cancer cells. The efficacy of the combination treatment was further validated in patient tumor–derived organoid (PDO) and xenograft mouse (PDX) models, providing important insights into patient-specific drug responses. Our data revealed that HDAC8 activity was essential for reducing the acetylation level of structural maintenance of chromosomes protein 3 (SMC3) ahead of replication forks and preventing R loop formation. HDAC8 inactivation resulted in slowed fork progression and checkpoint kinase activation. Our findings indicate that HDAC8 guards the integrity of the replicating genome, and the cancer-specific synthetic lethality between HDAC8 and checkpoint kinases provides a promising replication stress–targeting strategy for treating a broad range of cancers.

Authors

Ting-Yu Chang, Yan Yan, Zih-Yao Yu, Moeez Rathore, Nian-Zhe Lee, Hui-Ju Tseng, Li-Hsin Cheng, Wei-Jan Huang, Wei Zhang, Ernest R. Chan, Yulan Qing, Ming-Lun Kang, Rui Wang, Kelvin K. Tsai, John J. Pink, William E. Harte, Stanton L. Gerson, Sung-Bau Lee

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Figure 9

Proposed model of HDAC8 functions in chromatin replication.

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Proposed model of HDAC8 functions in chromatin replication.
In the unper...
In the unperturbed condition, cohesin complexes are loaded on chromatin before DNA replication. The SMC3 acetyltransferase ESCO1 and the deacetylase HDAC8 coordinately regulate the turnover of SMC3 acetylation to control cohesin mobility and genome organization. SMC3 deacetylation by HDAC8 increases cohesin flexibility on chromatin and thus facilitates the fork passing through the cohesin complex. After chromatin replication, ESCO2 acetylates SMC3 to promote cohesion establishment that tethers 2 sister chromatids together. HDAC8 inhibition causes hyperacetylation of chromatin-bound SMC3, resulting in reduced cohesin mobility and accumulation of R-loops that block replisomes traveling on chromatin. This generates replication stress and activates checkpoint kinases to secure replication fork integrity. Inactivation of checkpoint activity in cancer cells further exacerbates replication stress to an intolerable level, leading to fork collapse and, thus, cancer-specific cytotoxicity.

Copyright © 2025 American Society for Clinical Investigation
ISSN: 0021-9738 (print), 1558-8238 (online)

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