Enhancing chemotherapy response through augmented synthetic lethality by co-targeting nucleotide excision repair and cell-cycle checkpoints

© 2020, The Author(s). In response to DNA damage, a synthetic lethal relationship exists between the cell cycle checkpoint kinase MK2 and the tumor suppressor p53. Here, we describe the concept of augmented synthetic lethality (ASL): depletion of a third gene product enhances a pre-existing syntheti...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Kong, Yi Wen, Dreaden, Erik C, Morandell, Sandra, Zhou, Wen, Dhara, Sanjeev S, Sriram, Ganapathy, Lam, Fred C, Patterson, Jesse C, Quadir, Mohiuddin, Dinh, Anh, Shopsowitz, Kevin E, Varmeh, Shohreh, Yilmaz, Ömer H, Lippard, Stephen J, Reinhardt, H Christian, Hemann, Michael T, Hammond, Paula T, Yaffe, Michael B
Other Authors: Koch Institute for Integrative Cancer Research at MIT
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Springer Science and Business Media LLC 2021
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/133093
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Summary:© 2020, The Author(s). In response to DNA damage, a synthetic lethal relationship exists between the cell cycle checkpoint kinase MK2 and the tumor suppressor p53. Here, we describe the concept of augmented synthetic lethality (ASL): depletion of a third gene product enhances a pre-existing synthetic lethal combination. We show that loss of the DNA repair protein XPA markedly augments the synthetic lethality between MK2 and p53, enhancing anti-tumor responses alone and in combination with cisplatin chemotherapy. Delivery of siRNA-peptide nanoplexes co-targeting MK2 and XPA to pre-existing p53-deficient tumors in a highly aggressive, immunocompetent mouse model of lung adenocarcinoma improves long-term survival and cisplatin response beyond those of the synthetic lethal p53 mutant/MK2 combination alone. These findings establish a mechanism for co-targeting DNA damage-induced cell cycle checkpoints in combination with repair of cisplatin-DNA lesions in vivo using RNAi nanocarriers, and motivate further exploration of ASL as a generalized strategy to improve cancer treatment.