Genome instability and pressure on non-homologous end joining drives chemotherapy resistance via a DNA repair crisis switch in triple negative breast cancer

Author:

Wiegmans Adrian P12ORCID,Ward Ambber23,Ivanova Ekaterina1ORCID,Duijf Pascal H G145,Adams Mark N1,Najib Idris Mohd1,Van Oosterhout Romy3,Sadowski Martin C1,Kelly Greg23,Morrical Scott W6,O’Byrne Ken1,Lee Jason S237ORCID,Richard Derek J1

Affiliation:

1. Queensland University of Technology (QUT), Cancer and Ageing Research Program, Centre for Genomics and Personalised Health, School of Biomedical Sciences, Translational Research Institute, Woolloongabba QLD 4121, Australia

2. School of Medicine, University of Queensland, Herston, QLD, 4006, Australia

3. Epigenetics and Diseases Laboratory, QIMR Berghofer Medical Research Institute, Herston, QLD, 4006, Australia

4. Centre for Data Science, Queensland University of Technology (QUT), Brisbane, QLD, Australia

5. University of Queensland Diamantina Institute, University of Queensland, Brisbane, QLD, Australia

6. Department of Biochemistry, Larner College of Medicine, University of Vermont, Burlington, VT 05405, USA

7. School of Biomedical Sciences, Queensland University of Technology, Brisbane, QLD, Australia

Abstract

Abstract Chemotherapy is used as a standard-of-care against cancers that display high levels of inherent genome instability. Chemotherapy induces DNA damage and intensifies pressure on the DNA repair pathways that can lead to deregulation. There is an urgent clinical need to be able to track the emergence of DNA repair driven chemotherapy resistance and tailor patient staging appropriately. There have been numerous studies into chemoresistance but to date no study has elucidated in detail the roles of the key DNA repair components in resistance associated with the frontline clinical combination of anthracyclines and taxanes together. In this study, we hypothesized that the emergence of chemotherapy resistance in triple negative breast cancer was driven by changes in functional signaling in the DNA repair pathways. We identified that consistent pressure on the non-homologous end joining pathway in the presence of genome instability causes failure of the key kinase DNA-PK, loss of p53 and compensation by p73. In-turn a switch to reliance on the homologous recombination pathway and RAD51 recombinase occurred to repair residual double strand DNA breaks. Further we demonstrate that RAD51 is an actionable target for resensitization to chemotherapy in resistant cells with a matched gene expression profile of resistance highlighted by homologous recombination in clinical samples.

Funder

Breast Friends

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

General Medicine

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