Enhancing chemotherapy response through augmented synthetic lethality by co-targeting nucleotide excision repair and cell-cycle checkpoints

通过共同靶向核苷酸切除修复和细胞周期检查点来增强合成致死性,从而提高化疗反应

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作者:Yi Wen Kong # ,Erik C Dreaden # ,Sandra Morandell ,Wen Zhou ,Sanjeev S Dhara ,Ganapathy Sriram ,Fred C Lam ,Jesse C Patterson ,Mohiuddin Quadir ,Anh Dinh ,Kevin E Shopsowitz ,Shohreh Varmeh ,Ömer H Yilmaz ,Stephen J Lippard ,H Christian Reinhardt ,Michael T Hemann ,Paula T Hammond ,Michael B Yaffe

Abstract

In response to DNA damage, a synthetic lethal relationship exists between the cell cycle checkpoint kinase MK2 and the tumor suppressor p53. Here, we describe the concept of augmented synthetic lethality (ASL): depletion of a third gene product enhances a pre-existing synthetic lethal combination. We show that loss of the DNA repair protein XPA markedly augments the synthetic lethality between MK2 and p53, enhancing anti-tumor responses alone and in combination with cisplatin chemotherapy. Delivery of siRNA-peptide nanoplexes co-targeting MK2 and XPA to pre-existing p53-deficient tumors in a highly aggressive, immunocompetent mouse model of lung adenocarcinoma improves long-term survival and cisplatin response beyond those of the synthetic lethal p53 mutant/MK2 combination alone. These findings establish a mechanism for co-targeting DNA damage-induced cell cycle checkpoints in combination with repair of cisplatin-DNA lesions in vivo using RNAi nanocarriers, and motivate further exploration of ASL as a generalized strategy to improve cancer treatment.

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