Author:
Avelar Rita A.,Armstrong Amy J.,Carvette Gracie,Puleo Noah,Gupta Riya,Colina Jose,Joseph Peronne,Sobeck Alex,O’Connor Caitlin M.,Gandhi Agharnan,Dziubinski Michele L.,Ma Daniel Shanhuai,Waggoner Steven,Zanotti Kristine,Nagel Christa,Resnick Kimberly,Singh Sareena,Thomas Daffyd,Skala Stephanie,Zhang Junran,Narla Goutham,DiFeo Analisa
Abstract
AbstractHigh-Grade Serous Carcinoma (HGSC) is the most common and lethal ovarian cancer subtype. PARP-inhibitors (PARPi) have become the mainstay of HGSC targeted therapy, given that these tumors are driven by a high degree of genomic instability and Homologous Recombination (HR) defects. Nonetheless, only ∼30% of patients initially respond to treatment, ultimately relapsing with resistant disease. Thus, despite recent advances in drug development and increased understanding of genetic alterations driving HGSC progression, mortality has not declined, highlighting the need for novel therapies. Using a Small Molecule Activator of Protein Phosphatase 2A (PP2A) (SMAP-061), we investigated the mechanism by which PP2A stabilization induces apoptosis in Patient-Derived HGSC cells and Xenograft (PDX) models alone or in combination with PARPi. We uncovered that PP2A genes essential for transformation (B56α,B56γ and PR72) and basal phosphatase activity (PP2A-A and -C) are heterozygously lost in the majority of HGSC. Moreover, loss of these PP2A genes correlates with worse overall patient survival. We show that SMAP-061 stabilization of PP2A inhibits the HR output by targeting RAD51, leading to chronic accumulation of DNA damage and ultimately apoptosis. Furthermore, combination of SMAP-061 and PARPi leads to enhanced apoptosis in both HR-proficient and -deficient cells and in patient-derived xenograft models. Our studies identify PP2A as novel regulator of HR and introduces PP2A activators as a potential treatment for HGSC tumors. Our studies further emphasize the potential of PP2A modulators to overcome PARPi insensitivity, given that targeting RAD51 has presented benefits in overcoming PARPi-resistance driven by BRCA1/2 mutation reversions.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory