@article{HenrikssonCalderonMontanoSolvieetal.2022, author = {Henriksson, Sofia and Calder{\´o}n-Monta{\~n}o, Jos{\´e} Manuel and Solvie, Daniel and Warpman Berglund, Ulrika and Helleday, Thomas}, title = {Overexpressed c-Myc sensitizes cells to TH1579, a mitotic arrest and oxidative DNA damage inducer}, series = {Biomolecules}, volume = {12}, journal = {Biomolecules}, number = {12}, issn = {2218-273X}, doi = {10.3390/biom12121777}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-297547}, year = {2022}, abstract = {Previously, we reported that MTH1 inhibitors TH588 and TH1579 selectively induce oxidative damage and kill Ras-expressing or -transforming cancer cells, as compared to non-transforming immortalized or primary cells. While this explains the impressive anti-cancer properties of the compounds, the molecular mechanism remains elusive. Several oncogenes induce replication stress, resulting in under replicated DNA and replication continuing into mitosis, where TH588 and TH1579 treatment causes toxicity and incorporation of oxidative damage. Hence, we hypothesized that oncogene-induced replication stress explains the cancer selectivity. To test this, we overexpressed c-Myc in human epithelial kidney cells (HA1EB), resulting in increased proliferation, polyploidy and replication stress. TH588 and TH1579 selectively kill c-Myc overexpressing clones, enforcing the cancer cell selective killing of these compounds. Moreover, the toxicity of TH588 and TH1579 in c-Myc overexpressing cells is rescued by transcription, proteasome or CDK1 inhibitors, but not by nucleoside supplementation. We conclude that the molecular toxicological mechanisms of how TH588 and TH1579 kill c-Myc overexpressing cells have several components and involve MTH1-independent proteasomal degradation of c-Myc itself, c-Myc-driven transcription and CDK activation.}, language = {en} } @article{FischerHartmannReisslandetal.2022, author = {Fischer, Thomas and Hartmann, Oliver and Reissland, Michaela and Prieto-Garcia, Cristian and Klann, Kevin and Pahor, Nikolett and Sch{\"u}lein-V{\"o}lk, Christina and Baluapuri, Apoorva and Polat, B{\"u}lent and Abazari, Arya and Gerhard-Hartmann, Elena and Kopp, Hans-Georg and Essmann, Frank and Rosenfeldt, Mathias and M{\"u}nch, Christian and Flentje, Michael and Diefenbacher, Markus E.}, title = {PTEN mutant non-small cell lung cancer require ATM to suppress pro-apoptotic signalling and evade radiotherapy}, series = {Cell \& Bioscience}, volume = {12}, journal = {Cell \& Bioscience}, issn = {2045-3701}, doi = {10.1186/s13578-022-00778-7}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-299865}, year = {2022}, abstract = {Background Despite advances in treatment of patients with non-small cell lung cancer, carriers of certain genetic alterations are prone to failure. One such factor frequently mutated, is the tumor suppressor PTEN. These tumors are supposed to be more resistant to radiation, chemo- and immunotherapy. Results We demonstrate that loss of PTEN led to altered expression of transcriptional programs which directly regulate therapy resistance, resulting in establishment of radiation resistance. While PTEN-deficient tumor cells were not dependent on DNA-PK for IR resistance nor activated ATR during IR, they showed a significant dependence for the DNA damage kinase ATM. Pharmacologic inhibition of ATM, via KU-60019 and AZD1390 at non-toxic doses, restored and even synergized with IR in PTEN-deficient human and murine NSCLC cells as well in a multicellular organotypic ex vivo tumor model. Conclusion PTEN tumors are addicted to ATM to detect and repair radiation induced DNA damage. This creates an exploitable bottleneck. At least in cellulo and ex vivo we show that low concentration of ATM inhibitor is able to synergise with IR to treat PTEN-deficient tumors in genetically well-defined IR resistant lung cancer models.}, language = {en} } @article{MamontovaTrifaultBurger2022, author = {Mamontova, Victoria and Trifault, Barbara and Burger, Kaspar}, title = {Compartment-specific proximity ligation expands the toolbox to assess the interactome of the long non-coding RNA NEAT1}, series = {International Journal of Molecular Sciences}, volume = {23}, journal = {International Journal of Molecular Sciences}, number = {8}, issn = {1422-0067}, doi = {10.3390/ijms23084432}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-284185}, year = {2022}, abstract = {The nuclear paraspeckle assembly transcript 1 (NEAT1) locus encodes two long non-coding (lnc)RNA isoforms that are upregulated in many tumours and dynamically expressed in response to stress. NEAT1 transcripts form ribonucleoprotein complexes with numerous RNA-binding proteins (RBPs) to assemble paraspeckles and modulate the localisation and activity of gene regulatory enzymes as well as a subset of messenger (m)RNA transcripts. The investigation of the dynamic composition of NEAT1-associated proteins and mRNAs is critical to understand the function of NEAT1. Interestingly, a growing number of biochemical and genetic tools to assess NEAT1 interactomes has been reported. Here, we discuss the Hybridisation Proximity (HyPro) labeling technique in the context of NEAT1. HyPro labeling is a recently developed method to detect spatially ordered interactions of RNA-containing nuclear compartments in cultured human cells. After introducing NEAT1 and paraspeckles, we describe the advantages of the HyPro technology in the context of other methods to study RNA interactomes, and review the key findings in mapping NEAT1-associated RNA transcripts and protein binding partners. We further discuss the limitations and potential improvements of HyPro labeling, and conclude by delineating its applicability in paraspeckles-related cancer research.}, language = {en} }