Abstract
Colorectal cancer (CRC) is a leading cause of cancer-related death throughout the world. Despite improved screening efforts, most CRCs are diagnosed at late stages when surgery alone is not curative. Moreover, the low 5-year survival rate (∼8-13%) for those living with stage IV CRC highlights the need for better treatment options. Many current chemotherapeutic approaches are non-specific and associated with side effects due to their tendency to target both normal and cancer cells. To address this issue, synthetic lethal (SL) approaches are now being explored in cancer and are defined as the lethal combination of two independently viable mutations/deletions. From a therapeutic perspective, SL interactors of genes mutated in cancer serve as candidate drug targets. The present study focuses on RAD54B, a gene that is aberrantly expressed in many cancer types, including CRC. We show that PARP1 silencing or inhibition (BMN673 or Olaparib) leads to selective killing within RAD54B-deficient cells relative to controls, and is accompanied by increases in γ-H2AX (a surrogate marker of DNA double strand breaks) and cleaved Caspase-3 (an apoptotic indicator). We further show that BMN673 synergizes with LCS-1 (an inhibitor of an established RAD54B SL interactor) to induce enhanced killing in RAD54B-deficient cells. Collectively, these data identify RAD54B and PARP1 as SL interactors, and thus reveal PARP1 as a novel candidate drug target in RAD54B-deficient CRCs. These findings further show that combinatorial chemotherapies involving multiple SL targets may promote synergistic killing within cancer cells, a strategy that may hold potential in many cancer contexts.
Highlights
Colorectal cancer (CRC) is the second leading cause of cancer-related deaths in North America
To expand the number of drug targets of RAD54B and simultaneously assess the broad-spectrum applicability of poly (ADP-ribose) polymerase 1 (PARP1) as a candidate drug target, we evaluated the ability of PARP1 silencing and inhibition to induce synthetic lethal (SL) killing in RAD54B-deficient CRC cells
Using an isogenic RAD54B model, we show that PARP1 silencing preferentially reduces the number of RAD54B-deficient cells relative to controls
Summary
Colorectal cancer (CRC) is the second leading cause of cancer-related deaths in North America. In 2015, it was estimated that ~160,000 Americans and Canadians were newly diagnosed with CRC, with an additional ~60,000 individuals succumbing to the disease [1, 2]. Based on these statistics it is evident that new therapeutic strategies are urgently needed to minimize the morbidity and mortality rates associated with the disease. In a CRC context, a synthetic lethal (SL) approach aims to exploit a pre-existing gene deletion or mutation (e.g. RAD54B) in a cancer cell by down regulating a SL interactor (i.e. drug target). Identifying SL interactors of genes somatically altered in CRC will identify candidate drug targets with the potential to exploit and target cancer using a precision medicine strategy
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