Abstract

PARP inhibitors (PARPi) are FDA-approved monotherapy agents for the treatment of recurrent ovarian cancer in patients with and without a BRCA mutation. Despite promising response rates, not all patients derive benefit, and the majority develop resistance. PARPi treatment in vitro and in vivo induced an enrichment of CD133+ and CD117+ ovarian cancer stem cells (CSC). This effect was not affected by BRCA mutation status. In the CSC fractions, PARPi induced cell-cycle arrest in G2-M with a consequent accumulation of γH2AX, RAD51, and uniquely DMC1 foci. DNA damage and repair monitoring assays demonstrated that CSCs display more efficient DNA repair due, in part, to activation of embryonic repair mechanisms which involved the RAD51 homologue, DMC1 recombinase. Preserved and induced homologous repair (HR) could be a mechanism of an inherent resistance of CSCs to the synthetic lethality of PARPi that likely promotes disease recurrence. IMPLICATIONS: Treatment with PARPi fails to significantly affect ovarian cancer CSC populations, likely contributing to recurrent disease. Ovarian cancer CSCs stabilize genomic integrity after PARPi treatment, due to a more efficient inherent DNA repair capacity. PARPi-induced DMC1 recombinase and HR proficiency provide CSCs the opportunity to repair DNA damage more efficiently.Visual Overview: http://mcr.aacrjournals.org/content/molcanres/17/2/431/F1.large.jpg.

Highlights

  • Note: Supplementary data for this article are available at Molecular Cancer Research Online.Ó2018 American Association for Cancer Research.(1)

  • We investigated the activity of aldehyde dehydrogenase (ALDH), a detoxifying enzyme recognized as cancer stem cells (CSC) marker

  • We hypothesized that treatment with a PARP inhibitors (PARPi) would result in an enrichment of CSC populations that persist beyond therapy and eventually serve to seed tumor resurgence

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Summary

Introduction

Note: Supplementary data for this article are available at Molecular Cancer Research Online (http://mcr.aacrjournals.org/).Ó2018 American Association for Cancer Research.(1). Recent clinical trials have demonstrated that PARP inhibitors (PARPi) significantly prolong the time to recurrence and progression in all women with ovarian cancer, with the most robust antitumor activity observed in those women harboring a somatic or germline BRCA mutation [6]. These clinical data have led to FDA approval of multiple PARPi as both maintenance and third-line therapies

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