Characterizing the WRN DNA Helicase in Prostate Cancer and Implications for Microsatellite Unstable Metastatic Prostate Cancers
Loading...
Date
Authors
Kohlbrenner, Emily
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Abstract
Prostate cancer is the most common non-skin malignancy in men worldwide and the second most common cause of cancer mortality in men. Metastatic prostate cancer
(mPC) is highly heterogenous and enriched for aberrations in genes involved in DNA
repair, the loss of which generates further genetic alterations and genomic instability
that ultimately promotes tumorigenesis. The DNA Helicase-Exonuclease RECQL2
protein, commonly referred to as WRN, plays an integral role in DNA repair by
regulating the dynamics of the replication fork. WRN is lost along the 8p chromosomal
arm in 10% of prostate cancers; however, the role of WRN in mPC remains unclear.
WRN has also been established as a promising target for synthetic lethality in mismatch
repair deficient (MMRd) cancer cells with microsatellite instability (MSI), an aggressive
subtype of metastatic disease that promotes oncogenesis via genome hypermutability.
We aimed to identify the prognostic value of WRN-specific copy loss in mPC
patient tumors as well as investigate the sensitivity of MSI-mPC cell models to
engineered WRN knockdown. We first showed that adverse outcomes are associated
with WRN copy number status in mPC, and connect mutual exclusivity between loss of
WRN and mismatch repair deficient tumors using large scale clinical datasets. Then, we
tested the sensitivity to WRN inhibitor NSC 19630 in the LUCaP PDX xenograft lines,
and found marked sensitivity in tumor lines with DNA Repair Deficiency (DRD). Further,
we demonstrated that MSI prostate cancer cells are indeed sensitive to WRN loss over
time. Finally, using quantified confocal imaging, we showed that tertiary DNA secondary
structures at GC rich regions, known as G-Quadruplexes, are associated with
replicative stress in MMRd-MSI cells and are themselves a promising target for
chemotherapeutics. Together, this work expands the knowledge of DRD heterogeneity
in mPC and provides novel insight into the molecular mechanisms of WRN sensitivity in
MSI cells.
Description
Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Washington, 2021
