Abstract

Endometrial adenocarcinoma (EndoCA) is the most common gynecologic cancer type in the United States, and its incidence is increasing. The majority of patients are disease-free after surgical resection of stage I tumors, which is often followed by radiotherapy, but most patients with advanced disease recur and have a poor prognosis, largely because the tumors become refractory to cytotoxic chemotherapies. PTEN, a commonly mutated tumor suppressor in EndoCAs, is well known for its ability to inhibit the AKT/mTOR signaling pathway. Nuclear functions for PTEN have been proposed as well, but whether those affect EndoCA development, progression, or outcomes is not well understood. Using immunohistochemistry, nuclear PTEN expression was observed in approximately half of EndoCA patient tumors, independent of grade and cytoplasmic PTEN expression. Higher levels of the DNA damage response (DDR) marker, γH2AX, were observed by immunohistochemistry and immunofluorescence in human EndoCA tumor sections that were PTEN-negative, in murine EndoCA tissues that were genetically modified to be PTEN-null, and in Ishikawa EndoCA cells, which do not express endogenous PTEN. Overexpression of exogenous PTEN-WT or PTEN-NLS, a modified PTEN with an added nuclear localization signal, significantly improved both DDR and G2-M transition in Ishikawa cells treated with a DNA-damaging agent. Whereas PARP inhibition with Olaparib was not as effective in Ishikawa cells expressing native or PTEN-NLS, inhibition with Talazoparib was not affected by PTEN overexpression. These results suggest that nuclear PTEN subcellular localization in human EndoCA could be diagnostic when considering DDR therapeutic intervention. Mol Cancer Ther; 17(9); 1995-2003. ©2018 AACR.

Highlights

  • Endometrial adenocarcinoma (EndoCA), a cancer that arises from the endometrial epithelium [1], is the most common gynecologic tumor in developed countries and has the second highest incidence in developing countries after cervical cancer [2]

  • Stalling and collapse of DNA replication forks by activation of oncogenes lead to double-strand breaks (DSB) in both precancerous lesions and cancers [35]

  • phosphatase and tensin homolog (PTEN) antagonizes the activation of the oncogene, AKT, by dephosphorylating PIP3 [7] in the cytoplasm and maintains the stability of DNA replication fork by facilitating chromatin loading of RAD51 [16] in the nucleus

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Summary

Introduction

Endometrial adenocarcinoma (EndoCA), a cancer that arises from the endometrial epithelium [1], is the most common gynecologic tumor in developed countries and has the second highest incidence in developing countries after cervical cancer [2]. EndoCA is diagnosed during or after menopause with abnormal uterine bleeding in 90% of cases, the rest are diagnosed in premenopausal women, 5% of whom are younger than 40 years. Note: Supplementary data for this article are available at Molecular Cancer Therapeutics Online (http://mct.aacrjournals.org/). A. Mukherjee and A.L. Patterson contributed to this article.

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