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Data from Werner Helicase Is a Synthetic-Lethal Vulnerability in Mismatch Repair–Deficient Colorectal Cancer Refractory to Targeted Therapies, Chemotherapy, and Immunotherapy

Authors :
Mathew J. Garnett
Alberto Bardelli
Emile E. Voest
Sabrina Arena
Salvatore Siena
Andrea Sartore-Bianchi
Federica Di Nicolantonio
Fengtang Yang
Martin Michaelis
Jindrich Cinatl
Krijn K. Dijkstra
Daniele Oddo
Luuk J. Schipper
Ruby Banerjee
Carlotta Cancelliere
Iñigo Sánchez Rodríguez
Sara F. Vieira
Sarah Consonni
Giuseppe Rospo
Giovanni Crisafulli
Esmée J. van Vliet
Chiara M. Cattaneo
Gabriele Picco
Publication Year :
2023
Publisher :
American Association for Cancer Research (AACR), 2023.

Abstract

Targeted therapies, chemotherapy, and immunotherapy are used to treat patients with mismatch repair–deficient (dMMR)/microsatellite instability-high (MSI-H) colorectal cancer. The clinical effectiveness of targeted therapy and chemotherapy is limited by resistance and drug toxicities, and about half of patients receiving immunotherapy have disease that is refractory to immune checkpoint inhibitors. Loss of Werner syndrome ATP-dependent helicase (WRN) is a synthetic lethality in dMMR/MSI-H cells. To inform the development of WRN as a therapeutic target, we performed WRN knockout or knockdown in 60 heterogeneous dMMR colorectal cancer preclinical models, demonstrating that WRN dependency is an almost universal feature and a robust marker for patient selection. Furthermore, models of resistance to clinically relevant targeted therapy, chemotherapy, and immunotherapy retain WRN dependency. These data show the potential of therapeutically targeting WRN in patients with dMMR/MSI-H colorectal cancer and support WRN as a therapeutic option for patients with dMMR/MSI-H cancers refractory to current treatment strategies.Significance:We found that a large, diverse set of dMMR/MSI-H colorectal cancer preclinical models, including models of treatment-refractory disease, are WRN-dependent. Our results support WRN as a promising synthetic-lethal target in dMMR/MSI-H colorectal cancer tumors as a monotherapy or in combination with targeted agents, chemotherapy, or immunotherapy.This article is highlighted in the In This Issue feature, p. 1861

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........630b5771b5fa59c5d46f2744ccfa0f5b
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1158/2159-8290.c.6549163.v1