Identification of a Synthetic Lethal Relationship between Nucleotide Excision Repair Deficiency and Irofulven Sensitivity in Urothelial Cancer

Cisplatin-based chemotherapy is a first-line treatment for muscle-invasive and metastatic urothelial cancer. Approximately 10% of bladder urothelial tumors have a somatic missense mutation in the nucleotide excision repair (NER) gene, , which confers increased sensitivity to cisplatin-based chemothe...

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Published inClinical cancer research Vol. 27; no. 7; pp. 2011 - 2022
Main Authors Börcsök, Judit, Sztupinszki, Zsofia, Bekele, Raie, Gao, Sizhi P, Diossy, Miklos, Samant, Amruta S, Dillon, Kasia M, Tisza, Viktoria, Spisák, Sándor, Rusz, Orsolya, Csabai, Istvan, Pappot, Helle, Frazier, Zoë J, Konieczkowski, David J, Liu, David, Vasani, Naresh, Rodrigues, James A, Solit, David B, Hoffman-Censits, Jean H, Plimack, Elizabeth R, Rosenberg, Jonathan E, Lazaro, Jean-Bernard, Taplin, Mary-Ellen, Iyer, Gopa, Brunak, Søren, Lozsa, Rita, Van Allen, Eliezer M, Szüts, Dávid, Mouw, Kent W, Szallasi, Zoltan
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published United States 01.04.2021
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Summary:Cisplatin-based chemotherapy is a first-line treatment for muscle-invasive and metastatic urothelial cancer. Approximately 10% of bladder urothelial tumors have a somatic missense mutation in the nucleotide excision repair (NER) gene, , which confers increased sensitivity to cisplatin-based chemotherapy. However, a significant subset of patients is ineligible to receive cisplatin-based therapy due to medical contraindications, and no NER-targeted approaches are available for platinum-ineligible or platinum-refractory -mutant cases. We used a series of NER-proficient and NER-deficient preclinical tumor models to test sensitivity to irofulven, an abandoned anticancer agent. In addition, we used available clinical and sequencing data from multiple urothelial tumor cohorts to develop and validate a composite mutational signature of deficiency and cisplatin sensitivity. We identified a novel synthetic lethal relationship between tumor NER deficiency and sensitivity to irofulven. Irofulven specifically targets cells with inactivation of the transcription-coupled NER (TC-NER) pathway and leads to robust responses and , including in models with acquired cisplatin resistance, while having minimal effect on cells with intact NER. We also found that a composite mutational signature of deficiency was strongly associated with cisplatin response in patients and was also associated with cisplatin and irofulven sensitivity in preclinical models. Tumor NER deficiency confers sensitivity to irofulven, a previously abandoned anticancer agent, with minimal activity in NER-proficient cells. A composite mutational signature of NER deficiency may be useful in identifying patients likely to respond to NER-targeting agents, including cisplatin and irofulven. .
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These authors contributed equally.
J. Börcsök, Z. Sztupinszki, R. Bekele, D. Szüts, K.W. Mouw and Z. Szallasi made substantial contributions to the conception of the work. S.P. Gao and D.B. Solit conceived the study. J. Börcsök, Z. Sztupinszki and M. Diossy designed and performed analyses. R. Bekele, A.S. Samant, K.M. Dillon, V. Tisza, S. Spisák, O. Rusz, Z.J. Frazier, R. Lozsa, S.P. Gao, N. Vasani and J.A. Rodrigues designed and performed experiments. D.J. Konieczkowski, D. Liu and J.-B. Lazaro performed analyses. J. Börcsök, R. Bekele, D. Szüts, K.W. Mouw and Z. Szallasi wrote and edited the manuscript. S.P. Gao and D.B. Solit wrote the manuscript. Z. Sztupinszki, M. Diossy, A.S. Samant, K.M. Dillon, D. Liu and J.-B. Lazaro edited the manuscript. I. Csabai, H. Pappot, J.H. Hoffman-Censits, E.R. Plimack, J.E. Rosenberg, M.-E. Taplin, G. Iyer, S. Brunak and E.M. Van Allen substantively revised the manuscript. E.M. Van Allen oversaw analyses. D. Szüts, K.W. Mouw and Z. Szallasi oversaw the project.
Author contributions
ISSN:1078-0432
1557-3265
DOI:10.1158/1078-0432.ccr-20-3316