Replication Stress Is an Actionable Genetic Vulnerability in Desmoplastic Small Round Cell Tumors

Asuka Kawachi(Inserm), Madison M. Lenormand(Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique), Clémence Astier(Université Paris-Sud), Noé Herbel(Université Paris-Sud), Meritxell B. Cutrona(Institut Gustave Roussy), Carine Ngo(Inserm), Marlène Garrido(Inserm), Thomas Eychenne(Inserm), Nicolas Dorvault(Inserm), Laetitia Bordelet(Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique), Feifei Song(Breast Cancer Now), Ryme Bouyakoub(Institut Gustave Roussy), Anastasia Loktev(Institute of Cancer Research), Antonio Romo‐Morales(Institute of Cancer Research), Clémence Henon(Inserm), Léo Colmet‐Daage(Inserm), Julien Vibert(Inserm), Marjorie Drac(Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique), Rachel Brough(Breast Cancer Now), Étienne Schwob(Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique), Oliviano Martella(Institut Gustave Roussy), Guillaume Pinna(Commissariat à l'Énergie Atomique et aux Énergies Alternatives), Janet Shipley(Institute of Cancer Research), Sibylle Mittnacht(CRUK Lung Cancer Centre of Excellence), Astrid Zimmermann(Merck KGaA, Darmstadt (Germany)), Aditi Gulati(Breast Cancer Now), Olivier Mir(Institut Gustave Roussy), Axel Le Cesne(Institut Gustave Roussy), Matthieu Faron(Institut Gustave Roussy), Charles Honoré(Institut Gustave Roussy), Christopher J. Lord(Breast Cancer Now), Roman M. Chabanon(Université Paris-Sud), Sophie Postel‐Vinay(Université Paris-Sud)
Cancer Research
October 16, 2024
Cited by 5Open Access
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Abstract

Desmoplastic small round cell tumor (DSRCT) is an aggressive sarcoma subtype that is driven by the EWS-WT1 chimeric transcription factor. The prognosis for DSRCT is poor, and major advances in treating DSRCT have not occurred for over two decades. To identify effective therapeutic approaches to target DSRCT, we conducted a high-throughput drug sensitivity screen in a DSRCT cell line assessing chemosensitivity profiles for 79 small-molecule inhibitors. DSRCT cells were sensitive to PARP inhibitors (PARPi) and ataxia-telangiectasia and Rad3-related inhibitors (ATRi), as monotherapies and in combination. These effects were recapitulated using multiple clinical PARPi and ATRi in three biologically distinct, clinically relevant models of DSRCT, including cell lines, a patient-derived xenograft-derived organoid model, and a cell line-derived xenograft mouse model. Mechanistically, exposure to a combination of PARPi and ATRi caused increased DNA damage, G2-M checkpoint activation, micronuclei accumulation, replication stress, and R-loop formation. EWS-WT1 silencing abrogated these phenotypes and was epistatic with exogenous expression of the R-loop resolution enzyme RNase H1 in reversing sensitivity to PARPi and ATRi monotherapies. The combination of PARPi and ATRi also induced EWS-WT1-dependent cell-autonomous activation of the cyclic GMP-AMP synthase-stimulator of IFN genes innate immune pathway and cell-surface expression of PD-L1. Taken together, these findings point toward a role for EWS-WT1 in generating R-loop-dependent replication stress that leads to a targetable vulnerability, providing a rationale for the clinical assessment of PARPi and ATRi in DSRCT. Significance: EWS-WT1, the unique oncogenic driver of desmoplastic small round cell tumors, confers sensitivity to PARP and ATR inhibitors, supporting the potential of these drugs in treating patients with this aggressive sarcoma subtype.


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