Abstract

In concurrent chemoradiotherapy, drugs are used to sensitize tumors to ionizing radiation. Although a spectrum of indications for simultaneous treatment with drugs and radiation has been defined, the molecular mechanisms underpinning tumor radiosensitization remain incompletely characterized for several such combinations. Here, we investigate the mechanisms of radiosensitization by the arabinoside nucleoside analogue 9-β-D-arabinofuranosyladenine (araA) placing particular emphasis on the repair of DNA double-strand breaks (DSB), and compare the results to those obtained with fludarabine (F-araA) and cytarabine (araC). Postirradiation treatment with araA strongly sensitizes cells to ionizing radiation, but leaves unchanged DSB repair by NHEJ in logarithmically growing cells, in sorted G1 or G2 phase populations, as well as in cells in the plateau phase of growth. Notably, araA strongly inhibits DSB repair by homologous recombination (HRR), as assessed by scoring ionizing radiation-induced RAD51 foci, and in functional assays using integrated reporter constructs. Cells compromised in HRR by RNAi-mediated transient knockdown of RAD51 show markedly reduced radiosensitization after treatment with araA. Remarkably, mutagenic DSB repair compensates for HRR inhibition in araA-treated cells. Compared with araA, F-araA and araC are only modestly radiosensitizing under the conditions examined. We propose that the radiosensitizing potential of nucleoside analogues is linked to their ability to inhibit HRR and concomitantly promote the error-prone processing of DSBs. Our observations pave the way to treatment strategies harnessing the selective inhibitory potential of nucleoside analogues and the development of novel compounds specifically utilizing HRR inhibition as a means of tumor cell radiosensitization.

Highlights

  • Concurrent chemoradiotherapy is an essential treatment option for the management of solid tumors

  • As araA has relatively limited clinical use, we determined the radiosensitizing potential of F-araA and araC, two nucleoside analogues extensively used in the clinic, using similar experimental protocols

  • The results presented here demonstrate differential radiosensitizing potential and different effects on HRR and B-NHEJ that may not be predicted from the ability of a nucleoside analogue to inhibit DNA replication

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Summary

Introduction

Concurrent chemoradiotherapy (cCRT) is an essential treatment option for the management of solid tumors. Nucleoside analogues are a class of chemotherapeutic drugs with antitumor activity. Some nucleoside analogues show strong radiosensitizing potential [1] and are relevant to cCRT. Our early work showed that a NA, 9-b-D-arabinofuranosyladenine (ara-A), has an impressive radiosensitizing potential [2]. AraA strongly inhibits repair of a slow form of potentially lethal damage in plateau phase rodent cells [3, 4], and sensitizes cycling human. Note: Supplementary data for this article are available at Molecular Cancer Therapeutics Online (http://mct.aacrjournals.org/)

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