[HTML][HTML] Elevated APOBEC3B expression drives a kataegic-like mutation signature and replication stress-related therapeutic vulnerabilities in p53-defective cells

J Nikkilä, R Kumar, J Campbell, I Brandsma… - British journal of …, 2017 - nature.com
J Nikkilä, R Kumar, J Campbell, I Brandsma, HN Pemberton, F Wallberg, K Nagy, I Scheer…
British journal of cancer, 2017nature.com
Background: Elevated APOBEC3B expression in tumours correlates with a kataegic pattern
of localised hypermutation. We assessed the cellular phenotypes associated with high-level
APOBEC3B expression and the influence of p53 status on these phenotypes using an
isogenic system. Methods: We used RNA interference of p53 in cells with inducible
APOBEC3B and assessed DNA damage response (DDR) biomarkers. The mutational
effects of APOBEC3B were assessed using whole-genome sequencing. In vitro small …
Abstract
Background:
Elevated APOBEC3B expression in tumours correlates with a kataegic pattern of localised hypermutation. We assessed the cellular phenotypes associated with high-level APOBEC3B expression and the influence of p53 status on these phenotypes using an isogenic system.
Methods:
We used RNA interference of p53 in cells with inducible APOBEC3B and assessed DNA damage response (DDR) biomarkers. The mutational effects of APOBEC3B were assessed using whole-genome sequencing. In vitro small-molecule inhibitor sensitivity profiling was used to identify candidate therapeutic vulnerabilities.
Results:
Although APOBEC3B expression increased the incorporation of genomic uracil, invoked DDR biomarkers and caused cell cycle arrest, inactivation of p53 circumvented APOBEC3B-induced cell cycle arrest without reversing the increase in genomic uracil or DDR biomarkers. The continued expression of APOBEC3B in p53-defective cells not only caused a kataegic mutational signature but also caused hypersensitivity to small-molecule DDR inhibitors (ATR, CHEK1, CHEK2, PARP, WEE1 inhibitors) as well as cisplatin/ATR inhibitor and ATR/PARP inhibitor combinations.
Conclusions:
Although loss of p53 might allow tumour cells to tolerate elevated APOBEC3B expression, continued expression of this enzyme might impart a number of therapeutic vulnerabilities upon tumour cells.
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