G-quadruplex DNA as a molecular target for induced synthetic lethality in cancer cells

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Abstract

Synthetic lethality is a genetic concept in which cell death is induced by the combination of mutations in two sensitive genes, while mutation of either gene alone is not sufficient to affect cell survival. Synthetic lethality can also be achieved "chemically" by combination of drug-like molecules targeting distinct but cooperative pathways. Previously, we reported that the small molecule pyridostatin (PDS) stabilizes G-quadruplexes (G4s) in cells and elicits a DNA damage response by causing the formation of DNA double strand breaks (DSB). Cell death mediated by ligand-induced G4 stabilization can be potentiated in cells deficient in DNA damage repair genes. Here, we demonstrate that PDS acts synergistically both with NU7441, an inhibitor of the DNA-PK kinase crucial for nonhomologous end joining repair of DNA DSBs, and BRCA2-deficient cells that are genetically impaired in homologous recombination-mediated DSB repair. G4 targeting ligands have potential as cancer therapeutic agents, acting synergistically with inhibition or mutation of the DNA damage repair machinery. © 2013 American Chemical Society.

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McLuckie, K. I. E., Di Antonio, M., Zecchini, H., Xian, J., Caldas, C., Krippendorff, B. F., … Balasubramanian, S. (2013). G-quadruplex DNA as a molecular target for induced synthetic lethality in cancer cells. Journal of the American Chemical Society, 135(26), 9640–9643. https://doi.org/10.1021/ja404868t

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