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EGFR Mutations Compromise Hypoxia-Associated Radiation Resistance through Impaired Replication Fork–Associated DNA Damage Repair

Authors :
Chaitanya S. Nirodi
Joel Andrews
Elaine Gavin
Kenichi Takeda
Debabrata Saha
Jennifer Clark
Nozomi Tomimatsu
Haruhiko Makino
Michael D. Story
Sandeep Burma
Lianghao Ding
Mohammad Saki
Prashanthi Javvadi
Source :
Molecular Cancer Research. 15:1503-1516
Publication Year :
2017
Publisher :
American Association for Cancer Research (AACR), 2017.

Abstract

EGFR signaling has been implicated in hypoxia-associated resistance to radiation or chemotherapy. Non–small cell lung carcinomas (NSCLC) with activating L858R or ΔE746-E750 EGFR mutations exhibit elevated EGFR activity and downstream signaling. Here, relative to wild-type (WT) EGFR, mutant (MT) EGFR expression significantly increases radiosensitivity in hypoxic cells. Gene expression profiling in human bronchial epithelial cells (HBEC) revealed that MT-EGFR expression elevated transcripts related to cell cycle and replication in aerobic and hypoxic conditions and downregulated RAD50, a critical component of nonhomologous end joining and homologous recombination DNA repair pathways. NSCLCs and HBEC with MT-EGFR revealed elevated basal and hypoxia-induced γ-H2AX–associated DNA lesions that were coincident with replication protein A in the S-phase nuclei. DNA fiber analysis showed that, relative to WT-EGFR, MT-EGFR NSCLCs harbored significantly higher levels of stalled replication forks and decreased fork velocities in aerobic and hypoxic conditions. EGFR blockade by cetuximab significantly increased radiosensitivity in hypoxic cells, recapitulating MT-EGFR expression and closely resembling synthetic lethality of PARP inhibition. Implications: This study demonstrates that within an altered DNA damage response of hypoxic NSCLC cells, mutant EGFR expression, or EGFR blockade by cetuximab exerts a synthetic lethality effect and significantly compromises radiation resistance in hypoxic tumor cells. Mol Cancer Res; 15(11); 1503–16. ©2017 AACR.

Details

ISSN :
15573125 and 15417786
Volume :
15
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Molecular Cancer Research
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....6ad1edf5aa6bad218820ce5ed92c737b
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1158/1541-7786.mcr-17-0136