生物
PARP抑制剂
外显子跳跃
外显子
遗传学
剪接
剪接位点突变
突变
癌症研究
聚ADP核糖聚合酶
分子生物学
选择性拼接
DNA
基因
聚合酶
作者
Ksenija Nešić,John J. Krais,Yifan Wang,Cassandra J. Vandenberg,Pooja Patel,Kathy Q. Cai,Tanya T. Kwan,Elizabeth Lieschke,Gwo‐Yaw Ho,Holly E. Barker,Justin Bedő,Silvia Casadei,Andrew Farrell,Marc R. Radke,Kristy Shield‐Artin,Jocelyn Sietsma Penington,Franziska Geissler,Elizabeth L. Kyran,Robert Betsch,Lijun Xu
标识
DOI:10.1186/s12943-024-02048-1
摘要
PARP inhibitor (PARPi) therapy has transformed outcomes for patients with homologous recombination DNA repair (HRR) deficient ovarian cancers, for example those with BRCA1 or BRCA2 gene defects. Unfortunately, PARPi resistance is common. Multiple resistance mechanisms have been described, including secondary mutations that restore the HR gene reading frame. BRCA1 splice isoforms △11 and △11q can contribute to PARPi resistance by splicing out the mutation-containing exon, producing truncated, partially functional proteins. However, the clinical impacts and underlying drivers of BRCA1 exon skipping are not fully understood. We analyzed nine ovarian and breast cancer patient derived xenografts (PDX) with BRCA1 exon 11 frameshift mutations for exon skipping and therapy response, including a matched PDX pair derived from a patient pre- and post-chemotherapy/PARPi. BRCA1 exon 11 skipping was elevated in PARPi resistant PDX tumors. Two independent PDX models acquired secondary BRCA1 splice site mutations (SSMs) that drive exon skipping, confirmed using qRT-PCR, RNA sequencing, immunoblotting and minigene modelling. CRISPR/Cas9-mediated disruption of splicing functionally validated exon skipping as a mechanism of PARPi resistance. SSMs were also enriched in post-PARPi ovarian cancer patient cohorts from the ARIEL2 and ARIEL4 clinical trials. Few PARPi resistance mechanisms have been confirmed in the clinical setting. While secondary/reversion mutations typically restore a gene's reading frame, we have identified secondary mutations in patient cohorts that hijack splice sites to enhance mutation-containing exon skipping, resulting in the overexpression of BRCA1 hypomorphs, which in turn promote PARPi resistance. Thus, BRCA1 SSMs can and should be clinically monitored, along with frame-restoring secondary mutations.
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