4.8 Article

Replication Protein A Availability during DNA Replication Stress Is a Major Determinant of Cisplatin Resistance in Ovarian Cancer Cells

Journal

CANCER RESEARCH
Volume 78, Issue 19, Pages 5561-5573

Publisher

AMER ASSOC CANCER RESEARCH
DOI: 10.1158/0008-5472.CAN-18-0618

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Funding

  1. Canadian Institutes of Health Research (CIHR) [364096]
  2. CIHR Foundation Award
  3. Fonds de Recherche du Quebec-Sante (FRQS)
  4. FRQS
  5. Banque de Tissus et de Donnees of the Reseau de Recherche sur le Cancer
  6. Canadian Tumor Repository Network (CTRNet)

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Intrinsic and acquired resistance to cisplatin remains a primary hurdle to treatment of high-grade serous ovarian cancer (HGSOC). Cisplatin selectively kills tumor cells by inducing DNAcrosslinks that block replicativeDNApolymerases. Single-stranded DNA (ssDNA) generated at resulting stalled replication forks (RF) is bound and protected by heterotrimeric replication protein A (RPA), which then serves as a platform for recruitment and activation of replication stress response factors. Cells deficient in this response are characterized by extensive ssDNA formation and excessive RPA recruitment that exhausts the available pool of RPA, which (i) inhibits RPAdependent processes such as nucleotide excision repair (NER) and (ii) causes catastrophic failure of blocked RF. Here, we investigated the influence of RPA availability on chemosensitivity using a panel of human HGSOC cell lines. Our data revealed a striking correlation among these cell lines between cisplatin sensitivity and the inability to efficiently repair DNA via NER, specifically during S phase. Such defects in NER were attributable to RPA exhaustion arising from aberrant activation of DNA replication origins during replication stress. Reduced RPA availability promoted Mre11-dependent degradation of nascent DNA at stalled RF in cell lines exhibiting elevated sensitivity to cisplatin. Strikingly, defective S-phase NER, RF instability, and cisplatin sensitivity could all be rescued by ectopic overexpression of RPA. Taken together, our findings indicate that RPA exhaustion represents a major determinant of cisplatin sensitivity in HGSOC cell lines. Significance: The influence of replication protein A exhaustion on cisplatin sensitivity harbors important implications toward improving therapy of various cancers that initially respond to platinum-based agents but later relapse due to intrinsic or acquired drug resistance. (C) 2018 AACR.

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