Exploiting interconnected synthetic lethal interactions between PARP inhibition and cancer cell reversible senescence

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Abstract

Senescence is a tumor suppression mechanism defined by stable proliferation arrest. Here we demonstrate that the known synthetic lethal interaction between poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase 1 inhibitors (PARPi) and DNA repair triggers p53-independent ovarian cancer cell senescence defined by senescence-associated phenotypic hallmarks including DNA-SCARS, inflammatory secretome, Bcl-XL-mediated apoptosis resistance, and proliferation restriction via Chk2 and p21 (CDKN1A). The concept of senescence as irreversible remains controversial and here we show that PARPi-senescent cells re-initiate proliferation upon drug withdrawal, potentially explaining the requirement for sustained PARPi therapy in the clinic. Importantly, PARPi-induced senescence renders ovarian and breast cancer cells transiently susceptible to second-phase synthetic lethal approaches targeting the senescence state using senolytic drugs. The combination of PARPi and a senolytic is effective in preclinical models of ovarian and breast cancer suggesting that coupling these synthetic lethalities provides a rational approach to their clinical use and may together be more effective in limiting resistance.

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Fleury, H., Malaquin, N., Tu, V., Gilbert, S., Martinez, A., Olivier, M. A., … Rodier, F. (2019). Exploiting interconnected synthetic lethal interactions between PARP inhibition and cancer cell reversible senescence. Nature Communications, 10(1). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-019-10460-1

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