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Somatic mutation of the cohesin complex subunit confers therapeutic vulnerabilities in cancer
Yunhua Liu, … , Guang Ji, Xiongbin Lu
Yunhua Liu, … , Guang Ji, Xiongbin Lu
Published April 12, 2018
Citation Information: J Clin Invest. 2018;128(7):2951-2965. https://doi.org/10.1172/JCI98727.
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Research Article Oncology

Somatic mutation of the cohesin complex subunit confers therapeutic vulnerabilities in cancer

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Abstract

A synthetic lethality–based strategy has been developed to identify therapeutic targets in cancer harboring tumor-suppressor gene mutations, as exemplified by the effectiveness of poly ADP-ribose polymerase (PARP) inhibitors in BRCA1/2-mutated tumors. However, many synthetic lethal interactors are less reliable due to the fact that such genes usually do not perform fundamental or indispensable functions in the cell. Here, we developed an approach to identifying the “essential lethality” arising from these mutated/deleted essential genes, which are largely tolerated in cancer cells due to genetic redundancy. We uncovered the cohesion subunit SA1 as a putative synthetic-essential target in cancers carrying inactivating mutations of its paralog, SA2. In SA2-deficient Ewing sarcoma and bladder cancer, further depletion of SA1 profoundly and specifically suppressed cancer cell proliferation, survival, and tumorigenic potential. Mechanistically, inhibition of SA1 in the SA2-mutated cells led to premature chromatid separation, dramatic extension of mitotic duration, and consequently, lethal failure of cell division. More importantly, depletion of SA1 rendered those SA2-mutated cells more susceptible to DNA damage, especially double-strand breaks (DSBs), due to reduced functionality of DNA repair. Furthermore, inhibition of SA1 sensitized the SA2-deficient cancer cells to PARP inhibitors in vitro and in vivo, providing a potential therapeutic strategy for patients with SA2-deficient tumors.

Authors

Yunhua Liu, Hanchen Xu, Kevin Van der Jeught, Yujing Li, Sheng Liu, Lu Zhang, Yuanzhang Fang, Xinna Zhang, Milan Radovich, Bryan P. Schneider, Xiaoming He, Cheng Huang, Chi Zhang, Jun Wan, Guang Ji, Xiongbin Lu

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Figure 5

SA2-mutated cancer cells, upon depletion of SA1, are defective in HR.

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SA2-mutated cancer cells, upon depletion of SA1, are defective in HR.
(A...
(A) Negative enrichment of the DNA repair gene set in the SA1-KD TC32 cells, determined by GO enrichment analysis. (B) Venn diagram showing overlaps of dysregulated DNA repair genes in the SA1-KD TC32 cells with the HRD gene signature. (C) Heatmap of clusters indicates that TC32 cells had increased levels of HRD upon SA1 KD, as analyzed by unsupervised clustering for HRD gene signature genes. (D) The SA2-mutated cancer cells are defective in the HR repair. Modified HR repair assay was performed by transfecting cells with DR-GFP DSB substrate and I-Sce I plasmids, and flow cytometry analysis was performed to detect GFP-positive cells. **P < 0.01; ***P < 0.001, Fisher’s exact test (B) and unpaired 2-tailed t test (D). Data are presented as mean ± SD and are representative of 3 independent experiments (D).

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