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Single-dose radiotherapy disables tumor cell homologous recombination via ischemia/reperfusion injury

Authors :
Carlo Greco
Howard J. Halpern
Cecile G. Campagne
Boris Epel
Michael J. Zelefsky
Guoqiang Hua
Zhigang Zhang
Ellen Ackerstaff
Carlos Cordon-Cardo
Yousef Mazaheri
Daniel S. Higginson
Stefan Klingler
Adriana Haimovitz-Friedman
James A. Russell
Richard Kolesnick
Joan Zatcky
Evis Sala
Simon N. Powell
Jason A. Koutcher
Tin Htwe Thin
Yoshiya Yamada
Andreas Rimner
H. Alberto Vargas
Katia Manova-Todorova
Zvi Fuks
C.R. Cleary
Shyam Rao
Sahra Bodo
Matthew Kaag
John D. Fuller
HyungJoon Cho
Source :
The Journal of clinical investigation, vol 129, iss 2
Publication Year :
2019
Publisher :
American Society for Clinical Investigation, 2019.

Abstract

Tumor cure with conventional fractionated radiotherapy is 65%, dependent on tumor cell-autonomous gradual buildup of DNA double-strand break (DSB) misrepair. Here we report that single-dose radiotherapy (SDRT), a disruptive technique that ablates more than 90% of human cancers, operates a distinct dual-target mechanism, linking acid sphingomyelinase-mediated (ASMase-mediated) microvascular perfusion defects to DNA unrepair in tumor cells to confer tumor cell lethality. ASMase-mediated microcirculatory vasoconstriction after SDRT conferred an ischemic stress response within parenchymal tumor cells, with ROS triggering the evolutionarily conserved SUMO stress response, specifically depleting chromatin-associated free SUMO3. Whereas SUMO3, but not SUMO2, was indispensable for homology-directed repair (HDR) of DSBs, HDR loss of function after SDRT yielded DSB unrepair, chromosomal aberrations, and tumor clonogen demise. Vasoconstriction blockade with the endothelin-1 inhibitor BQ-123, or ROS scavenging after SDRT using peroxiredoxin-6 overexpression or the SOD mimetic tempol, prevented chromatin SUMO3 depletion, HDR loss of function, and SDRT tumor ablation. We also provide evidence of mouse-to-human translation of this biology in a randomized clinical trial, showing that 24 Gy SDRT, but not 3×9 Gy fractionation, coupled early tumor ischemia/reperfusion to human cancer ablation. The SDRT biology provides opportunities for mechanism-based selective tumor radiosensitization via accessing of SDRT/ASMase signaling, as current studies indicate that this pathway is tractable to pharmacologic intervention.

Details

ISSN :
15588238 and 00219738
Volume :
129
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of Clinical Investigation
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....c6afc06766d01f545c0ff82dcc684ddb
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1172/jci97631