Abstract

DNA-dependent protein kinase (DNA-PK) is a serine/threonine protein involved in DNA damage response (DDR) signaling that may mediate kidney cyst growth in autosomal dominant polycystic kidney disease (ADPKD) due to its pleiotropic effects on proliferation and survival. To test this hypothesis, the expression of DNA-PK in human ADPKD and the in vitro effects of DNA-PK inhibition in a three-dimensional model of Madin-Darby Canine Kidney (MDCK) cyst growth and human ADPKD cells were assessed. In human ADPKD, the mRNA expression for all three subunits of the DNA-PK complex was increased, and using immunohistochemistry, the catalytic subunit (DNA-PKcs) was detected in the cyst lining epithelia of human ADPKD, in a focal manner. In vitro, NU7441 (a DNA-PK kinase inhibitor) reduced MDCK cyst growth by up to 52% after long-term treatment over 6–12 days. Although human ADPKD cell lines (WT9-7/WT9-12) did not exhibit synthetic lethality in response to DNA-PK kinase inhibition compared to normal human kidney cells (HK-2), the combination of low-dose NU7441 enhanced the anti-proliferative effects of sirolimus in WT9-7 and WT9-12 cells by 17 ± 10% and 11 ± 7%, respectively. In conclusion, these preliminary data suggest that DNA-PK mediates kidney cyst growth in vivo without a synthetically lethal interaction, conferring cell-specificity in human ADPKD cells. NU7441 enhanced the anti-proliferative effects of rapamycin complex 1 inhibitors, but the effect was modest.

Highlights

  • Autosomal dominant polycystic kidney disease (ADPKD) is due to germ-line variants, predominantly in either PKD1 (85%) or PKD2 (15%), encoding the polytopic integral membrane, polycystin-1, and the calcium transient receptor channel, polycystin-2, respectively [1,2,3]

  • The Expression of DNA-PK Is Upregulated in Human autosomal dominant polycystic kidney disease (ADPKD) Transcriptome

  • We evaluated whether a non-toxic dose of NU7441 (0.04 μM; Figure 4) could enhance the anti-proliferative effects of TORC1 inhibition at sub-therapeutic doses (2.5 to 50 nM sirolimus) on ADPKD cells compared to normal kidney cells

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Summary

Introduction

Autosomal dominant polycystic kidney disease (ADPKD) is due to germ-line variants, predominantly in either PKD1 (85%) or PKD2 (15%), encoding the polytopic integral membrane, polycystin-1, and the calcium transient receptor channel, polycystin-2, respectively [1,2,3]. Both genotype as well as the total dose of ADPKD-causative genes, govern the total kidney cyst burden and severity of kidney disease [4,5,6].

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