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Combinatorial targeting of Hippo-STRIPAK and PARP elicits synthetic lethality in gastrointestinal cancers

Authors :
Liwei An
Zhifa Cao
Pingping Nie
Hui Zhang
Zhenzhu Tong
Fan Chen
Yang Tang
Yi Han
Wenjia Wang
Zhangting Zhao
Qingya Zhao
Yuqin Yang
Yuanzhi Xu
Gemin Fang
Lei Shi
Huixiong Xu
Haiqing Ma
Shi Jiao
Zhaocai Zhou
Source :
The Journal of clinical investigation. 132(9)
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

The striatin-interacting phosphatase and kinase (STRIPAK) complexes integrate extracellular stimuli that result in intracellular activities. Previously, we discovered that STRIPAK is a key machinery responsible for loss of the Hippo tumor suppressor signal in cancer. Here, we identified the Hippo-STRIPAK complex as an essential player in the control of DNA double-stranded break (DSB) repair and genomic stability. Specifically, we found that the mammalian STE20-like protein kinases 1 and 2 (MST1/2), independent of classical Hippo signaling, directly phosphorylated zinc finger MYND type-containing 8 (ZMYND8) and hence resulted in the suppression of DNA repair in the nucleus. In response to genotoxic stress, the cyclic GMP-AMP synthase/stimulator of IFN genes (cGAS/STING) pathway was determined to relay nuclear DNA damage signals to the dynamic assembly of Hippo-STRIPAK via TANK-binding kinase 1-induced (TBK1-induced) structural stabilization of the suppressor of IKBKE 1- sarcolemma membrane-associated protein (SIKE1-SLMAP) arm. As such, we found that STRIPAK-mediated MST1/2 inactivation increased the DSB repair capacity of cancer cells and endowed these cells with resistance to radio- and chemotherapy and poly(ADP-ribose)polymerase (PARP) inhibition. Importantly, targeting the STRIPAK assembly with each of 3 distinct peptide inhibitors efficiently recovered the kinase activity of MST1/2 to suppress DNA repair and resensitize cancer cells to PARP inhibitors in both animal- and patient-derived tumor models. Overall, our findings not only uncover what we believe to be a previously unrecognized role for STRIPAK in modulating DSB repair but also provide translational implications of cotargeting STRIPAK and PARP for a new type of synthetic lethality anticancer therapy.

Details

ISSN :
15588238
Volume :
132
Issue :
9
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
The Journal of clinical investigation
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....08d9dab01cbab773e809573bb46d54a4