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Estrogen therapy induces receptor-dependent DNA damage enhanced by PARP inhibition in ER+ breast cancer. bioRxiv 2023 Mar 17

Date

03/31/2023

Pubmed ID

36993590

Pubmed Central ID

PMC10055145

DOI

10.1101/2023.03.16.532956

Abstract

PURPOSE: Clinical evidence indicates that treatment with estrogens elicits anti-cancer effects in ∼30% of patients with advanced endocrine-resistant estrogen receptor alpha (ER)-positive breast cancer. Despite the proven efficacy of estrogen therapy, its mechanism of action is unclear and this treatment remains under-utilized. Mechanistic understanding may offer strategies to enhance therapeutic efficacy.

EXPERIMENTAL DESIGN: We performed genome-wide CRISPR/Cas9 screening and transcriptomic profiling in long-term estrogen-deprived (LTED) ER+ breast cancer cells to identify pathways required for therapeutic response to the estrogen 17β-estradiol (E2). We validated findings in cell lines, patient-derived xenografts (PDXs), and patient samples, and developed a novel combination treatment through testing in cell lines and PDX models.

RESULTS: Cells treated with E2 exhibited replication-dependent markers of DNA damage and the DNA damage response prior to apoptosis. Such DNA damage was partially driven by the formation of DNA:RNA hybrids (R-loops). Pharmacological suppression of the DNA damage response via poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase (PARP) inhibition with olaparib enhanced E2-induced DNA damage. PARP inhibition synergized with E2 to suppress growth and prevent tumor recurrence in BRCA1/2 -mutant and BRCA1 /2-wild-type cell line and PDX models.

CONCLUSIONS: E2-induced ER activity drives DNA damage and growth inhibition in endocrine-resistant breast cancer cells. Inhibition of the DNA damage response using drugs such as PARP inhibitors can enhance therapeutic response to E2. These findings warrant clinical exploration of the combination of E2 with DNA damage response inhibitors in advanced ER+ breast cancer, and suggest that PARP inhibitors may synergize with therapeutics that exacerbate transcriptional stress.

Author List

Traphagen NA, Schwartz GN, Tau S, Jiang A, Hosford SR, Goen AE, Roberts AM, Romo BA, Johnson AL, Duffy EK, Demidenko E, Heverly P, Mosesson Y, Soucy SM, Kolling F, Miller TW

Author

Todd W. Miller PhD Professor in the Pharmacology and Toxicology department at Medical College of Wisconsin