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MEK inhibitor GSK1120212-mediated radiosensitization of pancreatic cancer cells involves inhibition of DNA double-strand break repair pathways

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Version 2 2018-08-31, 10:08
Version 1 2015-10-01, 00:00
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posted on 2018-08-31, 10:08 authored by Adriana Estrada-Bernal, Moumita Chatterjee, S Jaharul Haque, Linlin Yang, Meredith A Morgan, Shweta Kotian, David Morrell, Arnab Chakravarti, Terence M Williams

Purpose: Over 90% of pancreatic adenocarcinoma PC express oncogenic mutant KRAS that constitutively activates the Raf-MEK-MAPK pathway conferring resistance to both radiation and chemotherapy. MEK inhibitors have shown promising anti-tumor responses in recent preclinical and clinical studies, and are currently being tested in combination with radiation in clinical trials. Here, we have evaluated the radiosensitizing potential of a novel MEK1/2 inhibitor GSK1120212 (GSK212,or trametinib) and evaluated whether MEK1/2 inhibition alters DNA repair mechanisms in multiple PC cell lines.

Methods: Radiosensitization and DNA double-strand break (DSB) repair were evaluated by clonogenic assays, comet assay, nuclear foci formation (γH2AX, DNA-PK, 53BP1, BRCA1, and RAD51), and by functional GFP-reporter assays for homologous recombination (HR) and non-homologous end-joining (NHEJ). Expression and activation of DNA repair proteins were measured by immunoblotting.

Results: GSK212 blocked ERK1/2 activity and radiosensitized multiple KRAS mutant PC cell lines. Prolonged pre-treatment with GSK212 for 24-48 hours was required to observe significant radiosensitization. GSK212 treatment resulted in delayed resolution of DNA damage by comet assays and persistent γH2AX nuclear foci. GSK212 treatment also resulted in altered BRCA1, RAD51, DNA-PK, and 53BP1 nuclear foci appearance and resolution after radiation. Using functional reporters, GSK212 caused repression of both HR and NHEJ repair activity. Moreover, GSK212 suppressed the expression and activation of a number of DSB repair pathway intermediates including BRCA1, DNA-PK, RAD51, RRM2, and Chk-1.

Conclusion: GSK212 confers radiosensitization to KRAS-driven PC cells by suppressing major DNA-DSB repair pathways. These data provide support for the combination of MEK1/2 inhibition and radiation in the treatment of PC.

Funding

This work was supported by the following grants: ASTRO Junior Faculty Career Research Training Award (TW), American Society for Radiation Oncology (Grant: JF2013-2), and the National Institutes of Health National Center for Advancing Translational Sciences (Grant: KL2TR001068 to TW).

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