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Data from RNF168-Mediated Ubiquitin Signaling Inhibits the Viability of BRCA1-Null Cancers

Posted on 2023-03-31 - 03:00
Abstract

BRCA1 gene mutations impair homologous recombination (HR) DNA repair, resulting in cellular senescence and embryonic lethality in mice. Therefore, BRCA1-deficient cancers require adaptations that prevent excessive genomic alterations from triggering cell death. RNF168-mediated ubiquitination of γH2AX at K13/15 (ub-H2AX) serves as a recruitment module for the localization of 53BP1 to DNA break sites. Here, we found multiple BRCA1-mutant cancer cell lines and primary tumors with low levels of RNF168 protein expression. Overexpression of ectopic RNF168 or a ub-H2AX fusion protein induced cell death and delayed BRCA1-mutant tumor formation. Cell death resulted from the recruitment of 53BP1 to DNA break sites and inhibition of DNA end resection. Strikingly, reintroduction of BRCA1 or 53BP1 depletion restored HR and rescued the ability of cells to maintain RNF168 and ub-H2AX overexpression. Thus, downregulation of RNF168 protein expression is a mechanism for providing BRCA1-null cancer cell lines with a residual level of HR that is essential for viability. Overall, our work identifies loss of RNF168 ubiquitin signaling as a proteomic alteration that supports BRCA1-mutant carcinogenesis. We propose that restoring RNF168-ub-H2AX signaling, potentially through inhibition of deubiquitinases, could represent a new therapeutic approach.

Significance:

This study explores the concept that homologous recombination DNA repair is not an all-or-nothing concept, but a spectrum, and that where a tumor stands on this spectrum may have therapeutic relevance.

See related commentary by Wang and Wulf, p. 2720

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FUNDING

NIH

Susan Komen

Department of Defense

American Cancer Society - Tri State CEOs Against Cancer Postdoctoral Fellowship

Ovarian Cancer Research Alliance

Phil and Judy Messing

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Cancer Research

AUTHORS (8)

  • John J. Krais
    Yifan Wang
    Andrea J. Bernhardy
    Emma Clausen
    Jessica A. Miller
    Kathy Q. Cai
    Clare L. Scott
    Neil Johnson
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