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APOBEC3A drives acquired resistance to targeted therapies in non-small cell lung cancer

Authors :
Mandeep Banwait
Pégah Jalili
Jiachen Lin
Heidie Frisco-Cabanos
S. Oh
Nicole Phan
Lee Zou
Zofia Piotrowska
Marcello Stanzione
Daria Timonina
L.V. Sequist
Jeffrey A. Engelman
Varuna Nangia
Rémi Buisson
Faria M. Siddiqui
Rosemary Cobb
Aaron N. Hata
K. Dionne
Jaewon J. Lee
Hannah L. Archibald
Cyril H. Benes
Amanda K. Riley
Nicholas J. Dyson
Michael W. Lawlor
Cheong Xin Chan
Christopher J. Ott
H. Isozaki
A. Abbasi
Maria Gomez-Caraballo
Gad Getz
Adam Langenbucher
Samantha J. Bilton
Alice T. Shaw
Yosef E. Maruvka
Wenjia Su
Michael S. Lawrence
N. Nikpour
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, 2021.

Abstract

Acquired drug resistance to even the most effective anti-cancer targeted therapies remains an unsolved clinical problem. Although many drivers of acquired drug resistance have been identified1‒6, the underlying molecular mechanisms shaping tumor evolution during treatment are incompletely understood. The extent to which therapy actively drives tumor evolution by promoting mutagenic processes7 or simply provides the selective pressure necessary for the outgrowth of drug-resistant clones8 remains an open question. Here, we report that lung cancer targeted therapies commonly used in the clinic induce the expression of cytidine deaminase APOBEC3A (A3A), leading to sustained mutagenesis in drug-tolerant cancer cells persisting during therapy. Induction of A3A facilitated the formation of double-strand DNA breaks (DSBs) in cycling drug-treated cells, and fully resistant clones that evolved from drug-tolerant intermediates exhibited an elevated burden of chromosomal aberrations such as copy number alterations and structural variations. Preventing therapy-induced A3A mutagenesis either by gene deletion or RNAi-mediated suppression delayed the emergence of drug resistance. Finally, we observed accumulation of A3A mutations in lung cancer patients who developed drug resistance after treatment with sequential targeted therapies. These data suggest that induction of A3A mutagenesis in response to targeted therapy treatment may facilitate the development of acquired resistance in non-small-cell lung cancer. Thus, suppressing expression or enzymatic activity of A3A may represent a potential therapeutic strategy to prevent or delay acquired resistance to lung cancer targeted therapy.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........152a1f612e569ef1a840877cfed64792
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1101/2021.01.20.426852