DNA-PK—a candidate driver of hepatocarcinogenesis and tissue biomarker that predicts response to treatment and survival

L Cornell, JM Munck, C Alsinet, A Villanueva… - Clinical Cancer …, 2015 - AACR
L Cornell, JM Munck, C Alsinet, A Villanueva, L Ogle, CE Willoughby, D Televantou…
Clinical Cancer Research, 2015AACR
Purpose: Therapy resistance and associated liver disease make hepatocellular carcinomas
(HCC) difficult to treat with traditional cytotoxic therapies, whereas newer targeted
approaches offer only modest survival benefit. We focused on DNA-dependent protein
kinase, DNA-PKcs, encoded by PRKDC and central to DNA damage repair by
nonhomologous end joining. Our aim was to explore its roles in hepatocarcinogenesis and
as a novel therapeutic candidate. Experimental Design: PRKDC was characterized in liver …
Abstract
Purpose: Therapy resistance and associated liver disease make hepatocellular carcinomas (HCC) difficult to treat with traditional cytotoxic therapies, whereas newer targeted approaches offer only modest survival benefit. We focused on DNA-dependent protein kinase, DNA-PKcs, encoded by PRKDC and central to DNA damage repair by nonhomologous end joining. Our aim was to explore its roles in hepatocarcinogenesis and as a novel therapeutic candidate.
Experimental Design:PRKDC was characterized in liver tissues from of 132 patients [normal liver (n = 10), cirrhotic liver (n = 13), dysplastic nodules (n = 18), HCC (n = 91)] using Affymetrix U133 Plus 2.0 and 500 K Human Mapping SNP arrays (cohort 1). In addition, we studied a case series of 45 patients with HCC undergoing diagnostic biopsy (cohort 2). Histological grading, response to treatment, and survival were correlated with DNA-PKcs quantified immunohistochemically. Parallel in vitro studies determined the impact of DNA-PK on DNA repair and response to cytotoxic therapy.
Results: Increased PRKDC expression in HCC was associated with amplification of its genetic locus in cohort 1. In cohort 2, elevated DNA-PKcs identified patients with treatment-resistant HCC, progressing at a median of 4.5 months compared with 16.9 months, whereas elevation of activated pDNA-PK independently predicted poorer survival. DNA-PKcs was high in HCC cell lines, where its inhibition with NU7441 potentiated irradiation and doxorubicin-induced cytotoxicity, whereas the combination suppressed HCC growth in vitro and in vivo.
Conclusions: These data identify PRKDC/DNA-PKcs as a candidate driver of hepatocarcinogenesis, whose biopsy characterization at diagnosis may impact stratification of current therapies, and whose specific future targeting may overcome resistance. Clin Cancer Res; 21(4); 925–33. ©2014 AACR.
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