Abstract

BackgroundPoly ADP-ribose glycohydrolase (PARG) is responsible for the catabolism of PARP-synthesized PAR to free ADP-ribose. Inhibition of PARG leads to DNA repair interruption and consequently induces cell death. This study aims to evaluate the effect of a PARG inhibitor (PARGi) on epithelial ovarian cancer (OC) cell lines, alone and in combination with a PARP inhibitor (PARPi) and/or Cisplatin.MethodsPARG mRNA levels were studied in three different OC datasets: TCGA, Hendrix, and Meyniel. PARG protein levels were assessed in 100 OC specimens from our bio-bank. The therapeutic efficacy of PARGi was assessed using cell migration and clonogenic formation assays. Flow cytometry was used to evaluate the cell apoptosis rate and the changes in the cell cycle.ResultsPARG protein was highly expressed in 34% of the OC tumors and low expression was found in another 9%. Similarly, Hendrix, Meyneil and TCGA databases showed a significant up-regulation in PARG mRNA expression in OC samples as compared to normal tissue (P=0.001, P=0.005, P=0.005, respectively). The use of PARGi leads to decreased cell migration. PARGi in combination with PARPi or Cisplatin induced decreased survival of cells as compared to each drug alone. In the presence of PARPi and Cisplatin, PARG knockdown cell lines showed significant G2/M cell cycle arrest and cell death induction.ConclusionsPARG inhibition appears as a complementary strategy to PARP inhibition in the treatment of ovarian cancer, especially in the presence of homologous recombination defects.

Highlights

  • Ovarian cancer (OC) is the most lethal gynecologic malignancy, with an estimated 313 959 new cases and 207 252 deaths worldwide in 2020 [1, 2]

  • This study aims to evaluate the effect of a Poly ADP-ribose glycohydrolase (PARG) inhibitor (PARGi) on epithelial ovarian cancer (OC) cell lines, alone and in combination with a poly (ADP-ribose) polymerase (PARP) inhibitor (PARPi) and/or Cisplatin

  • PARG inhibition appears as a complementary strategy to PARP inhibition in the treatment of ovarian cancer, especially in the presence of homologous recombination defects

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Summary

Introduction

Ovarian cancer (OC) is the most lethal gynecologic malignancy, with an estimated 313 959 new cases and 207 252 deaths worldwide in 2020 [1, 2]. Current treatment for OC patients consists of a combination of maximal cytoreduction and platinum-taxane based chemotherapy [3]. Despite these aggressive frontline treatments, the prognosis for advanced stages is poor, and the 5-year survival rate is less than 25% for women diagnosed with stages III or IV [4]. In addition to Germline mutations in BRCA1/2 genes, BRCAness results from DNA-repair defect(s) arising from loss of homologous recombination (HR) function secondary to epigenetic perturbations such as aberrant methylation (5-31% in ovarian cancer), somatic mutations (

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