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CX-5461 is a DNA G-quadruplex stabilizer with selective lethality in BRCA1/2 deficient tumours

Authors :
Marco Di Antonio
Peter C. Stirling
Jason Wong
Tak W. Mak
Carlos Caldas
Teresa Ruiz de Algara
Daniel D. Le
Frank B Ye
John Soong
Grant W. Brown
Samuel Aparicio
Tomo Osako
Steven McKinney
Veena Mathew
Phil Hieter
Sohrab P. Shah
Shankar Balasubramanian
Nancy Dos Santos
Priscilla Soriano
Judit P. Banáth
Daniel Lai
Shu chuan Lin
Anni Zhang
Nigel J. O'Neil
Jennifer Silvester
James D. Brenton
Brandon Ho
Jessica Garcia
Kelsie L. Thu
Angela Hsin Chin Tsai
Farhia Kabeer
Vivien Wei
Marcel B. Bally
David W. Cescon
Derek S. Chiu
Hong Xu
Damian Yap
Darren N. Saunders
Jian Xian
Di Antonio, Marco [0000-0002-7321-1867]
Brenton, James [0000-0002-5738-6683]
Caldas, Carlos [0000-0003-3547-1489]
Balasubramanian, Shankar [0000-0002-0281-5815]
Apollo - University of Cambridge Repository
Source :
Nature Communications, Nature Communications, Vol 8, Iss 1, Pp 1-18 (2017)
Publication Year :
2016
Publisher :
Nature Research, 2016.

Abstract

G-quadruplex DNAs form four-stranded helical structures and are proposed to play key roles in different cellular processes. Targeting G-quadruplex DNAs for cancer treatment is a very promising prospect. Here, we show that CX-5461 is a G-quadruplex stabilizer, with specific toxicity against BRCA deficiencies in cancer cells and polyclonal patient-derived xenograft models, including tumours resistant to PARP inhibition. Exposure to CX-5461, and its related drug CX-3543, blocks replication forks and induces ssDNA gaps or breaks. The BRCA and NHEJ pathways are required for the repair of CX-5461 and CX-3543-induced DNA damage and failure to do so leads to lethality. These data strengthen the concept of G4 targeting as a therapeutic approach, specifically for targeting HR and NHEJ deficient cancers and other tumours deficient for DNA damage repair. CX-5461 is now in advanced phase I clinical trial for patients with BRCA1/2 deficient tumours (Canadian trial, NCT02719977, opened May 2016).<br />Stabilization of DNA quadruplex structures (G4) is lethal for cells with a compromised DNA repair pathway. Here, the authors show that CX-5461, a small molecule in clinical trials as RNA polymerase inhibitor, has G4-stablization properties and can be repurposed to target DNA repair-defective cancers cells.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Nature Communications, Nature Communications, Vol 8, Iss 1, Pp 1-18 (2017)
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....e3b37a42b2599734c43e4aa3b149b6c4