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GIUSEPPE BADALAMENTI

Polθ: emerging synthetic lethal partner in homologous recombination-deficient tumors

  • Authors: Bazan Russo, Tancredi Didier; Mujacic, Clarissa; Di Giovanni, Emilia; Vitale, Maria Concetta; Ferrante Bannera, Carla; Randazzo, Ugo; Contino, Silvia; Bono, Marco; Gristina, Valerio; Galvano, Antonio; Perez, Alessandro; Badalamenti, Giuseppe; Russo, Antonio; Bazan, Viviana; Incorvaia, Lorena
  • Publication year: 2024
  • Type: Review essay (rassegna critica)
  • OA Link: http://hdl.handle.net/10447/652553

Abstract

The most remarkable finding in synthetic lethality (SL) is the hypersensitivity to PARP inhibitors (PARPis) of the tumors harboring defects in genes involved in homologous repair (HR) such as BRCA1/2. Despite initial responsiveness to PARPi, the penetrance of the synthetic lethal interactions between BRCA1/2 genes and PARPi is incomplete. Thus, a significant proportion of HR-defective tumors experience intrinsic or acquired resistance, representing a key challenge of clinical research. An expanded concept of SL is opening new ways and includes novel forms of genetic interactions, investigating not only traditional SL of pairs genes but also SL between biological pathways that regulate the same essential survival cell function. In this context, recent research showed that HR and theta-mediated end-joining (TMEJ) pathways exhibit SL. DNA polymerase theta (Pol theta) is encoded by the POLQ gene and is a key component of the TMEJ, an essential backup pathway, intrinsically mutagenic, to repair resected double-strand breaks (DSBs) when the non-homologous end joining (NHEJ) and HR are impaired. Pol theta is broadly expressed in normal tissues, overexpressed in several cancers, and typically associated with poor outcomes and shorter relapse-free survival. Notably, HR-deficient tumor cells present the characteristic mutational signatures of the error-prone TMEJ pathway. According to this observation, the loss of HR proteins, such as BRCA1 or BRCA2, contributes to increasing the TMEJ-specific genomic profile, suggesting synthetic lethal interactions between loss of the POLQ and HR genes, and resulting in the emerging interest for Pol theta as a potential therapeutic target in BRCA1/2-associated tumors.This review summarizes the converging roles of the POLQ and HR genes in DNA DSB repair, the early-stage clinical trials using Pol theta inhibitor to treat HR-defective tumors and to overcome BRCA-reversion mutations responsible for therapeutic resistance, and the novel pleiotropic effects of Pol theta, paving the way for the development of unexplored synthetic lethality strategies.