Discovery and investigation of novel radiosensitising genes

<p>Radiotherapy is second only to surgery in the curative management of patients with cancer, and yet the molecular mechanisms that determine the sensitivity of tumours to radiation remain largely unclear. A high-throughput radiosensitivity screening method based on clonogenicity was developed...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Tiwana, G
Other Authors: McKenna, W
Format: Thesis
Published: 2015
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Summary:<p>Radiotherapy is second only to surgery in the curative management of patients with cancer, and yet the molecular mechanisms that determine the sensitivity of tumours to radiation remain largely unclear. A high-throughput radiosensitivity screening method based on clonogenicity was developed and a siRNA library against kinase targets was screened. The gold standard colony formation endpoint was chosen for determining reproductive cell death after radiation treatment, since effects on proliferation often do not reflect survival.</p> <p>Thiamine pyrophosphokinase-1 (TPK1), a key component of Vitamin B1/thiamine metabolism, was identified as a target for radiosensitisation. TPK1 knockdown caused significant radiosensitisation in cancer but not normal tissue cell lines. Other means of blocking this pathway such as knockdown of thiamine transporter-1 (THTR1) or treatment with the thiamine analogue pyrithiamine hydrobromide (PyrH) caused significant tumour specific radiosensitisation. There was persistent DNA damage in cells irradiated after TPK1 and THTR1 knockdown or PyrH treatment. Thus this screen allowed the identification of thiamine metabolism as a novel radiosensitisation target that affects DNA repair. Short-term modulation of thiamine metabolism could be a clinically exploitable strategy to achieve tumour specific radiosensitisation.</p> <p>Three additional genes, signal recognition particle-72 kDa (SRP72), glycogen synthase 3-beta (GSK3β) and MAP/Microtubule Affinity-Regulating Kinase 2 (MARK2) were also investigated. Knockdown of these genes radiosensitised both tumour and normal tissue cell lines and expression of two of them, GSK3β and SRP72 were found to be associated with poor recurrence-free survival in early breast cancer patients.</p>