Synthetic lethality of mRNA quality control complexes in cancer

被引:1
|
作者
Prindle, Vivian [1 ]
Richardson, Adam E. [1 ]
Sher, Kimberly R. [1 ]
Kongpachith, Sarah [2 ]
Kentala, Kaitlin [1 ]
Petiwala, Sakina [1 ]
Cheng, Dong [1 ]
Widomski, Deborah [1 ]
Le, Phuong [1 ]
Torrent, Maricel [1 ]
Chen, Anlu [2 ]
Walker, Stephen [1 ]
Palczewski, Marianne B. [1 ]
Mitra, Diya [1 ]
Manaves, Vlasios [1 ]
Shi, Xu [2 ]
Lu, Charles [1 ]
Sandoval, Stephanie [1 ]
Dezso, Zoltan [2 ]
Buchanan, F. Gregory [1 ]
Verduzco, Daniel [1 ]
Bierie, Brian [1 ]
Meulbroek, Jonathan A. [1 ]
Pappano, William N. [1 ]
Plotnik, Joshua P. [1 ]
机构
[1] AbbVie, N Chicago, IL 60064 USA
[2] AbbVie Bay Area, South San Francisco, CA USA
关键词
NO-GO; DISSOCIATION; DEPENDENCY; RIBOSOMES; INSIGHTS; DELETION; NONSTOP; PELOTA;
D O I
10.1038/s41586-024-08398-6
中图分类号
O [数理科学和化学]; P [天文学、地球科学]; Q [生物科学]; N [自然科学总论];
学科分类号
07 ; 0710 ; 09 ;
摘要
Synthetic lethality exploits the genetic vulnerabilities of cancer cells to enable a targeted, precision approach to treat cancer1. Over the past 15 years, synthetic lethal cancer target discovery approaches have led to clinical successes of PARP inhibitors2 and ushered several next-generation therapeutic targets such as WRN3, USP14, PKMYT15, POLQ6 and PRMT57 into the clinic. Here we identify, in human cancer, a novel synthetic lethal interaction between the PELO-HBS1L and SKI complexes of the mRNA quality control pathway. In distinct genetic contexts, including 9p21.3-deleted and high microsatellite instability (MSI-H) tumours, we found that phenotypically destabilized SKI complex leads to dependence on the PELO-HBS1L ribosomal rescue complex. PELO-HBS1L and SKI complex synthetic lethality alters the normal cell cycle and drives the unfolded protein response through the activation of IRE1, as well as robust tumour growth inhibition. Our results indicate that PELO and HBS1L represent novel therapeutic targets whose dependence converges upon SKI complex destabilization, a common phenotypic biomarker in diverse genetic contexts representing a significant population of patients with cancer.
引用
收藏
页码:1095 / 1103
页数:26
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [41] Harnessing synthetic lethality to predict the response to cancer treatment
    Joo Sang Lee
    Avinash Das
    Livnat Jerby-Arnon
    Rand Arafeh
    Noam Auslander
    Matthew Davidson
    Lynn McGarry
    Daniel James
    Arnaud Amzallag
    Seung Gu Park
    Kuoyuan Cheng
    Welles Robinson
    Dikla Atias
    Chani Stossel
    Ella Buzhor
    Gidi Stein
    Joshua J. Waterfall
    Paul S. Meltzer
    Talia Golan
    Sridhar Hannenhalli
    Eyal Gottlieb
    Cyril H. Benes
    Yardena Samuels
    Emma Shanks
    Eytan Ruppin
    Nature Communications, 9
  • [42] Synthetic lethality: a framework for the development of wiser cancer therapeutics
    Kaelin, William G., Jr.
    GENOME MEDICINE, 2009, 1
  • [43] Harnessing synthetic lethality to predict the response to cancer treatments
    Lee, Joo S.
    Das, Avinash
    Jerby-Arnon, Livnat
    Arafeh, Rand
    Davidson, Matthew
    Amzallag, Arnaud
    Park, Seung Gu
    Cheng, Kuoyuan
    Robinson, Welles
    Atias, Dikla
    Stossel, Chani
    Buzhor, Ella
    Stein, Gidi
    Waterfall, Joshua J.
    Meltzer, Paul S.
    Golan, Talia
    Hannenhalli, Sridhar
    Gottlieb, Eyal
    Benes, Cyril H.
    Samuels, Yardena
    Shanks, Emma
    Ruppin, Eytan
    MOLECULAR CANCER THERAPEUTICS, 2018, 17 (01)
  • [44] Synthetic lethality: exploiting the addiction of cancer to DNA repair
    Shaheen, Montaser
    Allen, Christopher
    Nickoloff, Jac A.
    Hromas, Robert
    BLOOD, 2011, 117 (23) : 6074 - 6082
  • [45] Identifying KRAS New Synthetic Lethality Relationships in Cancer
    Carvalho, S.
    Aarts, M.
    Riffell, J.
    Torrance, C.
    Lord, C. J.
    Ashworth, A.
    EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF CANCER, 2012, 48 : 33 - 33
  • [46] Synthetic Lethality: From Research to Precision Cancer Nanomedicine
    Gupta, Anuradha
    Ahmad, Anas
    Dar, Aqib Iqbal
    Khan, Rehan
    CURRENT CANCER DRUG TARGETS, 2018, 18 (04) : 337 - 346
  • [47] Potential promising of synthetic lethality in cancer research and treatment
    Fath, Mohsen Karami
    Najafiyan, Behnam
    Morovatshoar, Reza
    Khorsandi, Mahdieh
    Dashtizadeh, Adib
    Kiani, Arash
    Farzam, Farnoosh
    Kazemi, Kimia Sadat
    Nabi Afjadi, Mohsen
    NAUNYN-SCHMIEDEBERGS ARCHIVES OF PHARMACOLOGY, 2025, 398 (02) : 1403 - 1431
  • [48] Link synthetic lethality to drug sensitivity of cancer cells
    Wang, Ruiping
    Han, Yue
    Zhao, Zhangxiang
    Yang, Fan
    Chen, Tingting
    Zhou, Wenbin
    Wang, Xianlong
    Qi, Lishuang
    Zhao, Wenyuan
    Guo, Zheng
    Gu, Yunyan
    BRIEFINGS IN BIOINFORMATICS, 2019, 20 (04) : 1295 - 1307
  • [49] CRISPR Screens in Synthetic Lethality and Combinatorial Therapies for Cancer
    Castells-Roca, Laia
    Tejero, Eudald
    Rodriguez-Santiago, Benjamin
    Surralles, Jordi
    CANCERS, 2021, 13 (07)
  • [50] Moving ahead on harnessing synthetic lethality to fight cancer
    Jerby-Arnon, Livnat
    Ruppin, Eytan
    MOLECULAR & CELLULAR ONCOLOGY, 2015, 2 (02):