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ATR inhibition overcomes platinum tolerance associated with ERCC1- and p53-deficiency by inducing replication catastrophe. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • - ERCC1/XPF is an important protein for repairing DNA damage caused by certain chemotherapy drugs, and researchers found that lung cancer cells lacking ERCC1 and p53 can resist platinum-based chemotherapy.
  • - Inhibiting ATR, a protein that helps maintain DNA replication, restored sensitivity to platinum in these resistant cells by affecting replication fork protection and cell cycle checkpoints.
  • - Combining ATR inhibitors with platinum treatment not only increased DNA damage but also showed promise for enhancing immunotherapy effectiveness, making it a potential strategy to treat ERCC1-deficient lung cancers.

Article Abstract

ERCC1/XPF is a heterodimeric DNA endonuclease critical for repair of certain chemotherapeutic agents. We recently identified that ERCC1- and p53-deficient lung cancer cells are tolerant to platinum-based chemotherapy. ATR inhibition synergistically re-stored platinum sensitivity to platinum tolerant ERCC1-deficient cells. Mechanistically we show this effect is reliant upon several functions of ATR including replication fork protection and altered cell cycle checkpoints. Utilizing an inhibitor of replication protein A (RPA), we further demonstrate that replication fork protection and RPA availability are critical for platinum-based drug tolerance. Dual treatment led to increased formation of DNA double strand breaks and was associated with chromosome pulverization. Combination treatment was also associated with increased micronuclei formation which were capable of being bound by the innate immunomodulatory factor, cGAS, suggesting that combination platinum and ATR inhibition may also enhance response to immunotherapy in ERCC1-deficient tumors. studies demonstrate a significant effect on tumor growth delay with combination therapy compared with single agent treatment. Results of this study have led to the identification of a feasible therapeutic strategy combining ATR inhibition with platinum and potentially immune checkpoint blockade inhibitors to overcome platinum tolerance in ERCC1-deficient, p53-mutant lung cancers.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9832712PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/narcan/zcac045DOI Listing

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