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Copyright Nature Publishing Group Dec 2016

Abstract

Identifying genetic biomarkers of synthetic lethal drug sensitivity effects provides one approach to the development of targeted cancer therapies. Mutations in ARID1A represent one of the most common molecular alterations in human cancer, but therapeutic approaches that target these defects are not yet clinically available. We demonstrate that defects in ARID1A sensitize tumour cells to clinical inhibitors of the DNA damage checkpoint kinase, ATR, both in vitro and in vivo. Mechanistically, ARID1A deficiency results in topoisomerase 2A and cell cycle defects, which cause an increased reliance on ATR checkpoint activity. In ARID1A mutant tumour cells, inhibition of ATR triggers premature mitotic entry, genomic instability and apoptosis. The data presented here provide the pre-clinical and mechanistic rationale for assessing ARID1A defects as a biomarker of single-agent ATR inhibitor response and represents a novel synthetic lethal approach to targeting tumour cells.

Details

Title
ATR inhibitors as a synthetic lethal therapy for tumours deficient in ARID1A
Author
Williamson, Chris T; Miller, Rowan; Pemberton, Helen N; Jones, Samuel E; Campbell, James; Konde, Asha; Badham, Nicholas; Rafiq, Rumana; Brough, Rachel; Gulati, Aditi; Ryan, Colm J; Francis, Jeff; Vermulen, Peter B; Reynolds, Andrew R; Reaper, Philip M; Pollard, John R; Ashworth, Alan; Lord, Christopher J
Pages
13837
Publication year
2016
Publication date
Dec 2016
Publisher
Nature Publishing Group
e-ISSN
20411723
Source type
Scholarly Journal
Language of publication
English
ProQuest document ID
1848115068
Copyright
Copyright Nature Publishing Group Dec 2016