4.7 Article

A clinically relevant heterozygous ATR mutation sensitizes colorectal cancer cells to replication stress

Journal

SCIENTIFIC REPORTS
Volume 12, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

NATURE PORTFOLIO
DOI: 10.1038/s41598-022-09308-4

Keywords

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Funding

  1. INCa
  2. La Ligue Contre le Cancer (comite de l'Herault)
  3. ARC (Association pour la Recherche contre le Cancer)
  4. Universite de Montpellier

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Colorectal cancer is a common malignancy and its therapy often causes replication stress. The ATR-CHK1 pathway is responsible for managing this stress, and mutations in the ATR gene can increase sensitivity to drugs and enhance their synergy. These mutations lead to DNA damage, but targeting RPA and DNA-PK can optimize inhibition of the ATR-CHK1 pathway.
Colorectal cancer (CRC) ranks third among the most frequent malignancies and represents the second most common cause of cancer-related deaths worldwide. By interfering with the DNA replication process of cancer cells, several chemotherapeutic molecules used in CRC therapy induce replication stress (RS). At the cellular level, this stress is managed by the ATR-CHK1 pathway, which activates the replication checkpoint. In recent years, the therapeutic value of targeting this pathway has been demonstrated. Moreover, MSI + (microsatellite instability) tumors frequently harbor a nonsense, heterozygous mutation in the ATR gene. Using isogenic HCT116 clones, we showed that this mutation of ATR sensitizes the cells to several drugs, including SN-38 (topoisomerase I inhibitor) and VE-822 (ATR inhibitor) and exacerbates their synergistic effects. We showed that this mutation bottlenecks the replication checkpoint leading to extensive DNA damage. The combination of VE-822 and SN-38 induces an exhaustion of RPA and a subsequent replication catastrophe. Surviving cells complete replication and accumulate in G2 in a DNA-PK-dependent manner, protecting them from cell death. Together, our results suggest that RPA and DNA-PK represent promising therapeutic targets to optimize the inhibition of the ATR-CHK1 pathway in oncology. Ultimately, ATR frameshift mutations found in patients may also represent important prognostic factors.

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