Replicative stress in gastroesophageal adenocarcinoma is associated with chromosomal instability and sensitivity to DNA damage response inhibitors

Author:

Sahgal PranshuORCID,Patil Deepa T.,Sztupinszki Zsofia M.,Tisza Viktoria,Spisak Sandor,Huffman Brandon,Prosz Aurel,Singh Harshabad,Lazaro Jean-Bernard,Szallasi Zoltan,Cleary James M.,Sethi Nilay S.

Abstract

SUMMARYGastroesophageal adenocarcinoma (GEA) is an aggressive, often lethal, malignancy that displays marked chromosomal instability (CIN). To understand adaptive responses that enable CIN, we analyzed paired normal, premalignant, and malignant gastric lesions from human specimens and a carcinogen-induced mouse model, observing activation of replication stress, DNA damage response (DDR), and cell cycle regulator p21 in neoplastic progression. In GEA cell lines, expression of DDR markers correlated with ploidy abnormalities, including high-level focal amplifications and whole-genome duplication (WGD). Moreover, high expression of DNA damage markerH2AXcorrelated with CIN, WGD, and inferior patient survival. By developing and implementing a composite diagnostic score that incorporatesTP53mutation status, ploidy abnormalities, andH2AXexpression, among other genomic information, we can identify GEA cell lines with enhanced sensitivity to DDR pathway inhibitors targeting Chk1/2 and Wee1. Anti-tumor properties were further augmented in combination with irinotecan (SN38) but not gemcitabine chemotherapy. These results implicate specific DDR biomarkers and ploidy abnormalities as diagnostic proxy that may predict premalignant progression and response to DDR pathway inhibitors.

Publisher

Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory

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