Pan-cancer antagonistic inhibition pattern of ATM-driven G2/M checkpoint pathway vs other DNA repair pathways.

DNA Repair (Amst)

Laboratory for Translational Genomic Bioinformatics, Moscow Institute of Physics and Technology, Dolgoprudny, Moscow Region 141701, Russia; World-Class Research Center "Digital biodesign and personalized healthcare", Sechenov First Moscow State Medical University, Moscow, Russia; Laboratory for Genomic Analysis of Signaling Systems, Shemyakin-Ovchinnikov Institute of Bioorganic Chemistry, Moscow 117997, Russia; PathoBiology Group, European Organization for Research and Treatment of Cancer (EORTC), Brussels, Belgium.

Published: March 2023

AI Article Synopsis

  • DNA repair mechanisms are crucial for maintaining genome integrity and limiting tumor progression, but they can also help tumors survive radiation and chemotherapy treatments.
  • Research analyzed 38 DNA repair pathways across nine cancer types using RNAseq data from various databases, revealing a consistent downregulation of the G2/M checkpoint pathway and low p53 pathway activity in tumors.
  • The study identified that despite most DNA repair pathways being upregulated, key genes associated with the G2/M checkpoint and p53 pathways were significantly disrupted, highlighting their unique roles in cancer development.

Article Abstract

DNA repair mechanisms keep genome integrity and limit tumor-associated alterations and heterogeneity, but on the other hand they promote tumor survival after radiation and genotoxic chemotherapies. We screened pathway activation levels of 38 DNA repair pathways in nine human cancer types (gliomas, breast, colorectal, lung, thyroid, cervical, kidney, gastric, and pancreatic cancers). We took RNAseq profiles of the experimental 51 normal and 408 tumor samples, and from The Cancer Genome Atlas and Clinical Proteomic Tumor Analysis Consortium databases - of 500/407 normal and 5752/646 tumor samples, and also 573 normal and 984 tumor proteomic profiles from Proteomic Data Commons portal. For all the samplings we observed a congruent trend that all cancer types showed inhibition of G2/M arrest checkpoint pathway compared to the normal samples, and relatively low activities of p53-mediated pathways. In contrast, other DNA repair pathways were upregulated in most of the cancer types. The G2/M checkpoint pathway was statistically significantly downregulated compared to the other DNA repair pathways, and this inhibition was strongly impacted by antagonistic regulation of (i) promitotic genes CCNB and CDK1, and (ii) GADD45 genes promoting G2/M arrest. At the DNA level, we found that ATM, TP53, and CDKN1A genes accumulated loss of function mutations, and cyclin B complex genes - transforming mutations. These findings suggest importance of activation for most of DNA repair pathways in cancer progression, with remarkable exceptions of G2/M checkpoint and p53-related pathways which are downregulated and neutrally activated, respectively.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.dnarep.2023.103448DOI Listing

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