Abstract

<div>Abstract<p>Expression of protein arginine methyltransferase 5 (PRMT5) is highly positively correlated to DNA damage repair (DDR) and DNA replication pathway genes in many types of cancer cells, including ovarian and breast cancer. In the current study, we investigated whether pharmacologic inhibition of PRMT5 downregulates DDR/DNA replication pathway genes and sensitizes cancer cells to chemotherapy and PARP inhibition. Potent and selective PRMT5 inhibitors significantly downregulate expression of multiple DDR and DNA replication genes in cancer cells. Mechanistically, PRMT5 inhibition reduces the presence of PRMT5 and H4R3me2s on promoter regions of DDR genes such as <i>BRCA1/2</i>, <i>RAD51</i>, and <i>ATM</i>. PRMT5 inhibition also promotes global alternative splicing changes. Our data suggest that PRMT5 inhibition regulates expression of <i>FANCA</i>, <i>PNKP</i>, and <i>ATM</i> by promoting exon skipping and intron retention. Combining C220 or PRT543 with olaparib or chemotherapeutic agents such as cisplatin demonstrates a potent synergistic interaction in breast and ovarian cancer cells <i>in vitro</i>. Moreover, combination of PRT543 with olaparib effectively inhibits the growth of patient-derived breast and ovarian cancer xenografts. Furthermore, PRT543 treatment significantly inhibits growth of olaparib-resistant tumors <i>in vivo</i>. These studies reveal a novel mechanism of PRMT5 inhibition and suggest beneficial combinatorial effects with other therapies, particularly in patients with tumors that are resistant to therapies dependent on DNA damage as their mechanism of action.</p>Significance:<p>Patients with advanced cancers frequently develop resistance to chemotherapy or PARP inhibitors mainly due to circumvention and/or restoration of the inactivated DDR pathway genes. We demonstrate that inhibition of PRMT5 significantly downregulates a broad range of the DDR and DNA replication pathway genes. PRMT5 inhibitors combined with chemotherapy or PARP inhibitors demonstrate synergistic suppression of cancer cell proliferation and growth in breast and ovarian tumor models, including PARP inhibitor–resistant tumors.</p></div>

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