11 research outputs found

    Fanconi anemia and homologous recombination gene variants are associated with functional DNA repair defects in vitro and poor outcome in patients with advanced head and neck squamous cell carcinoma

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    Mutations in Fanconi Anemia or Homologous Recombination (FA/HR) genes can cause DNA repair defects and could therefore impact cancer treatment response and patient outcome. Their functional impact and clinical relevance in head and neck squamous cell carcinoma (HNSCC) is unknown. We therefore questioned whether functional FA/HR defects occurred in HNSCC and whether they are associated with FA/HR variants. We assayed a panel of 29 patient-derived HNSCC cell lines and found that a considerable fraction is hypersensitive to the crosslinker Mitomycin C and PARP inhibitors, a functional measure of FA/HR defects. DNA sequencing showed that these hypersensitivities are associated with the presence of bi-allelic rare germline and somatic FA/HR gene variants. We next questioned whether such variants are associated with prognosis and treatment response in HNSCC patients. DNA sequencing of 77 advanced stage HNSCC tumors revealed a 19% incidence of such variants. Importantly, these variants were associated with a poor prognosis (p = 0.027; HR = 2.6, 1.1–6.0) but favorable response to high cumulative cisplatin dose. We show how an integrated in vitro functional repair and genomic analysis can improve the prognostic value of genetic biomarkers. We conclude that repair defects are marked and frequent in HNSCC and are associated with clinical outcome.</p

    Cell cycle phase dependent role of DNA polymerase beta in DNA repair and survival after ionizing radiation.

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    Contains fulltext : 69923.pdf (publisher's version ) (Closed access)PURPOSE: The purpose of the present study was to determine the role of DNA polymerase beta in repair and response after ionizing radiation in different phases of the cell cycle. METHODS AND MATERIALS: Synchronized cells deficient and proficient in DNA polymerase beta were irradiated in different phases of the cell cycle as determined by BrdU/flow cytometry. Cell kill and DNA repair were assessed by colony formation and alkaline comet assays, respectively. RESULTS: We first demonstrated delayed repair of ionizing radiation induced DNA damage in confluent polymerase beta deficient cells. Cell synchronization experiments revealed a cell cycle phase dependence by demonstrating radiation hypersensitivity of polymerase beta-deficient cells in G1, but not in the S-phase. Complementing polymerase beta-deficient cells with polymerase beta reverted the hypersensitivity in G1. Ionizing radiation damage repair was found to be delayed in beta-deficient cells when irradiated in G1, but not in S. CONCLUSIONS: The data show a differential role of DNA polymerase beta driven base excision and single strand break repair throughout the cell cycle after ionizing radiation damage

    Role for DNA polymerase beta in response to ionizing radiation.

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    Contains fulltext : 53393.pdf (publisher's version ) (Closed access)Evidence for a role of DNA polymerase beta in determining radiosensitivity is conflicting. In vitro assays show an involvement of DNA polymerase beta in single strand break repair and base excision repair of oxidative damages, both products of ionizing radiation. Nevertheless the lack of DNA polymerase beta has been shown to have no effect on radiosensitivity. Here we show that mouse embryonic fibroblasts deficient in DNA polymerase beta are considerably more sensitive to ionizing radiation than wild-type cells, but only when confluent. The inhibitor methoxyamine renders abasic sites refractory to the dRP lyase activity of DNA polymerase beta. Methoxyamine did not significantly change radiosensitivity of wild-type fibroblasts in log phase. However, DNA polymerase beta deficient cells in log phase were radiosensitized by methoxyamine. Alkaline comet assays confirmed repair inhibition of ionizing radiation induced damage by methoxyamine in these cells, indicating both the existence of a polymerase beta-dependent long patch pathway and the involvement of another methoxyamine sensitive process, implying the participation of a second short patch polymerase(s) other than DNA polymerase beta. This is the first evidence of a role for DNA polymerase beta in radiosensitivity in vivo

    Targeted Radiosensitization of Cells Expressing Truncated DNA Polymerase beta

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    Contains fulltext : 89068.pdf (publisher's version ) (Closed access)Ionizing radiation (IR) is an effective anticancer treatment, although failures still occur. To improve radiotherapy, tumor-targeted strategies are needed to increase radiosensitivity of tumor cells, without influencing normal tissue radiosensitivity. Base excision repair (BER) and single-strand break repair (SSBR) contribute to the determination of sensitivity to IR. A crucial protein in BER/SSBR is DNA polymerase beta (polbeta). Aberrant polbeta expression is commonly found in human tumors and leads to inhibition of BER. Here, we show that truncated polbeta variant (polbeta-Delta)-expressing cells depend on homologous recombination (HR) for survival after IR, indicating that a considerable fraction of polbeta-Delta-induced lesions are subject to repair by HR. Increased sensitization was found not to result from involvement in DNA-dependent protein kinase-dependent nonhomologous end joining, the other major double-strand break repair pathway. Caffeine and the ATM inhibitor Ku55933 cause polbeta-Delta-dependent radiosensitization. Consistent with the observed HR dependence and the known HR-modulating activity of ATM, polbeta-Delta-expressing cells showed increased radiosensitization after BRCA2 knockdown that is absent under ATM-inhibited conditions. Our data suggest that treatment with HR modulators is a promising therapeutic strategy for exploiting defects in the BER/SSBR pathway in human tumors

    Mechanism of cell killing after ionizing radiation by a dominant negative DNA polymerase beta.

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    Several types of DNA lesion are induced after ionizing irradiation (IR) of which double strand breaks (DSBs) are expected to be the most lethal, although single strand breaks (SSBs) and DNA base damages are quantitatively in the majority. Proteins of the base excision repair (BER) pathway repair these numerous lesions. DNA polymerase beta has been identified as a crucial enzyme in BER and SSB repair (SSBR). We showed previously that inhibition of BER/SSBR by expressing a dominant negative DNA polymerase beta (polbetaDN) resulted in radiosensitization. We hypothesized increased kill to result from DSBs arising from unrepaired SSBs and BER intermediates. We find here higher numbers of IR-induced chromosome aberrations in polbetaDN expressing cells, confirming increased DSB formation. These aberrations did not result from changes in DSB induction or repair of the majority of lesions. SSB conversion to DSBs has been shown to occur during replication. We observed an increased induction of chromatid aberrations in polbetaDN expressing cells after IR, suggesting such a replication-dependence of secondary DSB formation. We also observed a pronounced increase of chromosomal deletions, the most likely cause of the increased kill. After H(2)O(2) treatment, polbetaDN expression only resulted in increased chromatid (not chromosome) aberrations. Together with the lack of sensitization to H(2)O(2), these data further suggest that the additional secondarily induced lethal DSBs resulted from repair attempts at complex clustered damage sites, unique to IR. Surprisingly, the polbetaDN induced increase in residual gammaH2AX foci number was unexpectedly low compared with the radiosensitization or induction of aberrations. Our data thus demonstrate the formation of secondary DSBs that are reflected by increased kill but not by residual gammaH2AX foci, indicating an escape from gammaH2AX-mediated DSB repair. In addition, we show that in the polbetaDN expressing cells secondary DSBs arise in a radiation-specific and partly replication-dependent manner

    Bcl-2 family members in childhood acute lymphoblastic leukemia:relationships with features at presentation, in vitro and in vivo drug response and long-term clinical outcome

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    We have found that, in addition to Bcl-2 and Bar, the expression levels of apoptosis inducers (Bad, Bak) and inhibitors (Bcl-x(L), Mcl-1) were highly variable in blasts from 78 children with newly diagnosed acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL). The patients were enrolled in the national study ALL-7 of the Dutch Childhood Leukemia Study Group. In contrast to Bcl-2 that inversely correlated with %S-phase cells and WBC, and was lower in T than in B-lineage ALL, the Bcl-2 family members were not found to be associated with features at presentation. These expression levels were also compared with drug resistance in in vitro MIT (methyl-thiazol-tetrazolium) assays for prednisolone, vincristine and asparaginase in 46 children. Protein expression levels of the Bcl-2 family were not found to correlate with in vitro resistance to the individual drugs or the combined drug resistance profile. In addition, neither peripheral blast reduction after 1 week of prednisone monotherapy nor long-term disease-free interval or survival showed a correlation with protein expression. Our results indicate that the anti-proliferative function of BcL-2 dominates its anti-apoptotic function in ALL, but neither Bcl-2 nor the Bcl-2 family members gained prognostic information in the risk-adapted protocol ALL-7
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