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RESEARCH PRODUCT
Deletion of 11q in Neuroblastomas Drives Sensitivity to PARP Inhibition
Victoria CastelJ. Antoni SirerolMarta PiquerasPablo BerlangaJaime Font De MoraElena SanmartínAdela CañeteLisandra Muñozsubject
Male0301 basic medicineCancer ResearchDNA repairAntineoplastic AgentsAtaxia Telangiectasia Mutated ProteinsKaplan-Meier EstimatePoly(ADP-ribose) Polymerase InhibitorsBiologyModels BiologicalPolymorphism Single NucleotideImmunophenotypingOlaparibNeuroblastoma03 medical and health scienceschemistry.chemical_compound0302 clinical medicineRecurrenceCell Line TumorNeuroblastomaBiomarkers TumormedicineAnimalsHumansAllelesNeoplasm StagingCisplatinTemozolomideChromosomes Human Pair 11High-Throughput Nucleotide SequencingCancerDrug SynergismPrognosismedicine.diseaseXenograft Model Antitumor AssaysMolecular biologyDisease Models Animal030104 developmental biologyOncologychemistryDrug Resistance Neoplasm030220 oncology & carcinogenesisPARP inhibitorCancer researchFemaleChromosome DeletionHaploinsufficiencyBiomarkersmedicine.drugdescription
AbstractPurpose: Despite advances in multimodal therapy, neuroblastomas with hemizygous deletion in chromosome 11q (20%–30%) undergo consecutive recurrences with poor outcome. We hypothesized that patients with 11q-loss may share a druggable molecular target(s) that can be exploited for a precision medicine strategy to improve treatment outcome.Experimental Design: SNP arrays were combined with next-generation sequencing (NGS) to precisely define the deleted region in 17 primary 11q-loss neuroblastomas and identify allelic variants in genes relevant for neuroblastoma etiology. We assessed PARP inhibitor olaparib in combination with other chemotherapy medications using both in vitro and in vivo models.Results: We detected that ATM haploinsufficiency and ATM allelic variants are common genetic hallmarks of 11q-loss neuroblastomas. On the basis of the distinct DNA repair pathways triggered by ATM and PARP, we postulated that 11q-loss may define a subgroup of neuroblastomas with higher sensitivity to PARP inhibitors. Noteworthy, concomitant treatment with olaparib and DNA alkylating agent temozolomide potently inhibited growth of cell lines harboring 11q-loss. This drug synergism was less potent when temozolomide was exchanged for cisplatin or irinotecan. Intact 11q cells concomitantly treated with ATM inhibitor displayed growth arrest and enhanced apoptosis, revealing a role for ATM in the mechanism that mediates sensitivity to temozolomide–olaparib. Interestingly, functional TP53 is required for efficacy of this treatment. In an in vivo model, coadministration of temozolomide–olaparib resulted in sustained xenograft regression.Conclusions: Our findings reveal a potent synergism between temozolomide and olaparib in treatment of neuroblastomas with 11q-loss and provide a rationale for further clinical investigation. Clin Cancer Res; 23(22); 6875–87. ©2017 AACR.
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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2017-11-14 | Clinical Cancer Research |