Ubiquitinated PCNA Drives USP1 Synthetic Lethality in Cancer

Antoine Simoneau(Tango Therapeutics (United States)), Justin L. Engel(Southwestern Medical Center), Madhavi Bandi(Tango Therapeutics (United States)), Katherine Lazarides(Tango Therapeutics (United States)), Shangtao Liu(Tango Therapeutics (United States)), Samuel R. Meier(Tango Therapeutics (United States)), Ashley H. Choi(Tango Therapeutics (United States)), Hongxiang Zhang(Tango Therapeutics (United States)), Binzhang Shen(Tango Therapeutics (United States)), Lauren Martires(Tango Therapeutics (United States)), Deepali Gotur(Tango Therapeutics (United States)), Truc V. Pham(Tango Therapeutics (United States)), Fang Li(Tango Therapeutics (United States)), Lina Gu(Tango Therapeutics (United States)), Shanzhong Gong(Tango Therapeutics (United States)), Minjie Zhang(Tango Therapeutics (United States)), Erik Wilker(Tango Therapeutics (United States)), Xuewen Pan(Tango Therapeutics (United States)), Douglas A. Whittington(Tango Therapeutics (United States)), Scott Throner(Tango Therapeutics (United States)), John P. Maxwell(Tango Therapeutics (United States)), Yingnan Chen(Tango Therapeutics (United States)), Yi Yu(Tango Therapeutics (United States)), Alan Huang(Tango Therapeutics (United States)), Jannik N. Andersen(Tango Therapeutics (United States)), Tianshu Feng(Tango Therapeutics (United States))
Molecular Cancer Therapeutics
October 12, 2022
Cited by 72Open Access
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Abstract

CRISPR Cas9-based screening is a powerful approach for identifying and characterizing novel drug targets. Here, we elucidate the synthetic lethal mechanism of deubiquitinating enzyme USP1 in cancers with underlying DNA damage vulnerabilities, specifically BRCA1/2 mutant tumors and a subset of BRCA1/2 wild-type (WT) tumors. In sensitive cells, pharmacologic inhibition of USP1 leads to decreased DNA synthesis concomitant with S-phase-specific DNA damage. Genome-wide CRISPR-Cas9 screens identify RAD18 and UBE2K, which promote PCNA mono- and polyubiquitination respectively, as mediators of USP1 dependency. The accumulation of mono- and polyubiquitinated PCNA following USP1 inhibition is associated with reduced PCNA protein levels. Ectopic expression of WT or ubiquitin-dead K164R PCNA reverses USP1 inhibitor sensitivity. Our results show, for the first time, that USP1 dependency hinges on the aberrant processing of mono- and polyubiquitinated PCNA. Moreover, this mechanism of USP1 dependency extends beyond BRCA1/2 mutant tumors to selected BRCA1/2 WT cancer cell lines enriched in ovarian and lung lineages. We further show PARP and USP1 inhibition are strongly synergistic in BRCA1/2 mutant tumors. We postulate USP1 dependency unveils a previously uncharacterized vulnerability linked to posttranslational modifications of PCNA. Taken together, USP1 inhibition may represent a novel therapeutic strategy for BRCA1/2 mutant tumors and a subset of BRCA1/2 WT tumors.


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