Abstract

The MRE11–RAD50–NBS1 (MRN) complex is critical for genomic stability. Although germline mutations in MRN may increase breast cancer susceptibility, such mutations are extremely rare. Here, we have conducted a comprehensive clinicopathological study of MRN in sporadic breast cancers. We have protein expression profiled for MRN and a panel of DNA repair factors involved in double-strand break repair (BRCA1, BRCA2, ATM, CHK2, ATR, Chk1, pChk1, RAD51, γH2AX, RPA1, RPA2, DNA-PKcs), RECQ DNA helicases (BLM, WRN, RECQ1, RECQL4, RECQ5), nucleotide excision repair (ERCC1) and base excision repair (SMUG1, APE1, FEN1, PARP1, XRCC1, Pol β) in 1650 clinical breast cancers. The prognostic significance of MRE11, RAD50 and NBS1 transcripts and their microRNA regulators (hsa-miR-494 and hsa-miR-99b) were evaluated in large clinical datasets. Expression of MRN components was analysed in The Cancer Genome Atlas breast cancer cohort. We show that low nuclear MRN is linked to aggressive histopathological phenotypes such as high tumour grade, high mitotic index, oestrogen receptor- and high-risk Nottingham Prognostic Index. In univariate analysis, low nuclear MRE11 and low nuclear RAD50 were associated with poor survival. In multivariate analysis, low nuclear RAD50 remained independently linked with adverse clinical outcomes. Low RAD50 transcripts were also linked with reduced survival. In contrast, overexpression of hsa-miR-494 and hsa-miR-99b microRNAs was associated with poor survival. We observed large-scale genome-wide alterations in MRN-deficient tumours contributing to aggressive behaviour. We conclude that MRN status may be a useful tool to stratify tumours for precision medicine strategies.

Highlights

  • The MRE11–RAD50–NBS1 complex (MRN), a chemo-mechanical molecular machine, is critical for the maintenance of genomic stability[1,2,3]

  • MRN is a hexameric complex consisting of two RAD50 subunits (ATPase activity), two MRE11 subunits (DNA structure-specific endo- or exonuclease activity) and two NBS1 subunits

  • The MRN complex is critical for genomic stability[1,2,3]

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Summary

Introduction

The MRE11–RAD50–NBS1 complex (MRN), a chemo-mechanical molecular machine, is critical for the maintenance of genomic stability[1,2,3]. MRN is required for processing DNA damage and for oncogene-induced replication stress. MRN is a hexameric complex consisting of two RAD50 subunits (ATPase activity), two MRE11 subunits (DNA structure-specific endo- or exonuclease activity) and two NBS1 subunits (a regulatory docking protein with phosphopeptide-interacting forkhead-associated and BRCA1 C-terminal domains flexibly linked to an MRE11 interface and adjacent C-terminal ATM kinase interaction motif). The interaction of MRE11, RAD50 and NBS1 together promote MRN complex stability[1,2,3]. MRN is recruited by RAD17 to sites of double-strand breaks (DSBs), which activates it[4]. MRN activates ataxia-telangiectasiamutated (ATM) kinase, which in turn phosphorylates more than

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