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Personalized synthetic lethality induced by targeting RAD52 in leukemias identified by gene mutation and expression profile

Authors :
Kara A. Scheibner
Jae-Woong Lee
Kimberly Cramer-Morales
Margaret Nieborowska-Skorska
Mariusz A. Wasik
Mhairi Copland
Tomasz Skorski
Michelle Padget
Curt I. Civin
David Irvine
Huimin Geng
Kimberly Haas
Markus Müschen
Feyruz V. Rassool
Wayne E. Childers
Tomasz Sliwinski
Darshan Roy
Artur Slupianek
Source :
Blood. 122:1293-1304
Publication Year :
2013
Publisher :
American Society of Hematology, 2013.

Abstract

Homologous recombination repair (HRR) protects cells from the lethal effect of spontaneous and therapy-induced DNA double-stand breaks. HRR usually depends on BRCA1/2-RAD51, and RAD52-RAD51 serves as back-up. To target HRR in tumor cells, a phenomenon called "synthetic lethality" was applied, which relies on the addiction of cancer cells to a single DNA repair pathway, whereas normal cells operate 2 or more mechanisms. Using mutagenesis and a peptide aptamer approach, we pinpointed phenylalanine 79 in RAD52 DNA binding domain I (RAD52-phenylalanine 79 [F79]) as a valid target to induce synthetic lethality in BRCA1- and/or BRCA2-deficient leukemias and carcinomas without affecting normal cells and tissues. Targeting RAD52-F79 disrupts the RAD52-DNA interaction, resulting in the accumulation of toxic DNA double-stand breaks in malignant cells, but not in normal counterparts. In addition, abrogation of RAD52-DNA interaction enhanced the antileukemia effect of already-approved drugs. BRCA-deficient status predisposing to RAD52-dependent synthetic lethality could be predicted by genetic abnormalities such as oncogenes BCR-ABL1 and PML-RAR, mutations in BRCA1 and/or BRCA2 genes, and gene expression profiles identifying leukemias displaying low levels of BRCA1 and/or BRCA2. We believe this work may initiate a personalized therapeutic approach in numerous patients with tumors displaying encoded and functional BRCA deficiency.

Details

ISSN :
15280020 and 00064971
Volume :
122
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Blood
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....b0fd2676d9d3a3a8c4677b4610993f46
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1182/blood-2013-05-501072