BRCA1 identified as a modulator of temozolomide resistance in P53 wild-type GBM using a high-throughput shRNA-based synthetic lethality screening

Am J Cancer Res. 2019 Nov 1;9(11):2428-2441. eCollection 2019.

Abstract

Glioblastoma multiforme (GBM), the most common type of primary brain tumor, is universally fatal, with a median survival duration ranging from 12-15 months despite maximum treatment efforts. Temozolomide (TMZ) is the current standard of care for GBM patients; however patients usually develop resistance to TMZ and limits its benefit. The identification of novel synergistic targets in GBM will lead to the development of new targeted drugs, which could be combined with broad-spectrum cytotoxic agents. In this study, we used a high-throughput synthetic lethality screen with a pooled short hairpin DNA repair library, in combination with TMZ, to identify targets that will enhance TMZ-induced antitumor effects. Using an unbiased bioinformatical analysis, we identified BRCA1 as a potential promising candidate gene that induced synthetic lethality with TMZ in glioma sphere-forming cells (GSCs). BRCA1 knockdown resulted in antitumor activity with TMZ in P53 wild-type GSCs but not in P53 mutant GSCs. TMZ treatment induced a DNA damage repair response; the activation of BRCA1 DNA repair pathway targets and knockdown of BRCA1, together with TMZ, led to increased DNA damage and cell death in P53 wild-type GSCs. Our study identified BRCA1 as a potential target that sensitizes TMZ-induced cell death in P53 wild-type GBM, suggesting that the combined inhibition of BRCA1 and TMZ treatment will be a successful targeted therapy for GBM patients.

Keywords: BRCA1; Synthetic lethality; TMZ; apoptosis.