Werner syndrome helicase is a selective vulnerability of microsatellite instability-high tumor cells

Author:

Lieb Simone1,Blaha-Ostermann Silvia1,Kamper Elisabeth1,Rippka Janine1,Schwarz Cornelia1,Ehrenhöfer-Wölfer Katharina1,Schlattl Andreas1,Wernitznig Andreas1,Lipp Jesse J1,Nagasaka Kota2ORCID,van der Lelij Petra2,Bader Gerd1ORCID,Koi Minoru3,Goel Ajay4,Neumüller Ralph A1,Peters Jan-Michael2ORCID,Kraut Norbert1,Pearson Mark A1,Petronczki Mark1ORCID,Wöhrle Simon1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Boehringer Ingelheim RCV GmbH & Co KG, Vienna, Austria

2. Research Institute of Molecular Pathology, Vienna, Austria

3. Division of Gastroenterology, Department of Internal Medicine, Comprehensive Cancer Center, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, United States

4. Center for Gastrointestinal Research, Baylor Scott & White Research Institute and Charles A. Sammons Cancer Center, Baylor University Medical Center, Dallas, United States

Abstract

Targeted cancer therapy is based on exploiting selective dependencies of tumor cells. By leveraging recent functional screening data of cancer cell lines we identify Werner syndrome helicase (WRN) as a novel specific vulnerability of microsatellite instability-high (MSI-H) cancer cells. MSI, caused by defective mismatch repair (MMR), occurs frequently in colorectal, endometrial and gastric cancers. We demonstrate that WRN inactivation selectively impairs the viability of MSI-H but not microsatellite stable (MSS) colorectal and endometrial cancer cell lines. In MSI-H cells, WRN loss results in severe genome integrity defects. ATP-binding deficient variants of WRN fail to rescue the viability phenotype of WRN-depleted MSI-H cancer cells. Reconstitution and depletion studies indicate that WRN dependence is not attributable to acute loss of MMR gene function but might arise during sustained MMR-deficiency. Our study suggests that pharmacological inhibition of WRN helicase function represents an opportunity to develop a novel targeted therapy for MSI-H cancers.

Funder

European Molecular Biology Organization

Human Frontier Science Program

Austrian Research Promotion Agency

H2020 European Research Council

Publisher

eLife Sciences Publications, Ltd

Subject

General Immunology and Microbiology,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology,General Medicine,General Neuroscience

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