TY - JOUR
T1 - Tumor treating fields cause replication stress and interfere with DNA replication fork maintenance
T2 - Implications for cancer therapy
AU - Karanam, Narasimha Kumar
AU - Ding, Lianghao
AU - Aroumougame, Asaithamby
AU - Story, Michael D.
N1 - Funding Information:
A Sponsored Research Agreement between MDS and Novocure provided funding for these studies. We thank Dr. Jonathan Feinberg of the Department of Radiation Oncology, UT Southwestern Medical Center for editorial support. All authors have read the journal's authorship agreement and the manuscript has been reviewed by and approved by all named authors. Funding: Funding provided by NovoCure Ltd, to MDS. Conflicts of Interest: All authors have read the journal's policy on disclosure of potential conflict of interest. NKK and MDS are inventors on US patent application titled ?Treating tumors using Tumor Treating Fields combined with a PARP inhibitor? which is pending approval. The other authors declare that they have no other competing interests. Author contributions: Conception and design: Narasimha Kumar Karanam, and Michael Story; Acquisition of data: Narasimha Kumar Karanam, and Lianghao-Ding; Analysis and interpretation of the data: all authors; Drafting the article: Narasimha Kumar Karanam; Critically revising the article: all authors; Study supervision: Michael Story, Data statement: All data supporting the conclusion of this manuscript are included as main and supplementary materials.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2019 The Authors
PY - 2020/3
Y1 - 2020/3
N2 - Tumor treating fields (TTFields) is a noninvasive physical modality of cancer therapy that applies low-intensity, intermediate frequency, and alternating electric fields to a tumor. Interference with mitosis was the first mechanism describing the effects of TTFields on cancer cells; however, TTFields was shown to not only reduce the rejoining of radiation-induced DNA double-strand breaks (DSBs), but to also induce DNA DSBs. The mechanism(s) by which TTFields generates DNA DSBs is related to the generation of replication stress including reduced expression of the DNA replication complex genes MCM6 and MCM10 and the Fanconi's Anemia pathway genes. When markers of DNA replication stress as a result of TTFields exposure were examined, newly replicated DNA length was reduced with TTFields exposure time and there was increased R-loop formation. Furthermore, as cells were exposed to TTFields a conditional vulnerability environment developed which rendered cells more susceptible to DNA damaging agents or agents that interfere with DNA repair or replication fork maintenance. The effect of TTFields exposure with concomitant exposure to cisplatin or PARP inhibition, the combination of TTFields plus concomitant PARP inhibition followed by radiation, or radiation alone at the end of a TTFields exposure were all synergistic. Finally, gene expression analysis of 47 key mitosis regulator genes suggested that TTFields-induced mitotic aberrations and DNA damage/replication stress events, although intimately linked to one another, are likely initiated independently of one another. This suggests that enhanced replication stress and reduced DNA repair capacity are also major mechanisms of TTFields effects, effects for which there are therapeutic implications.
AB - Tumor treating fields (TTFields) is a noninvasive physical modality of cancer therapy that applies low-intensity, intermediate frequency, and alternating electric fields to a tumor. Interference with mitosis was the first mechanism describing the effects of TTFields on cancer cells; however, TTFields was shown to not only reduce the rejoining of radiation-induced DNA double-strand breaks (DSBs), but to also induce DNA DSBs. The mechanism(s) by which TTFields generates DNA DSBs is related to the generation of replication stress including reduced expression of the DNA replication complex genes MCM6 and MCM10 and the Fanconi's Anemia pathway genes. When markers of DNA replication stress as a result of TTFields exposure were examined, newly replicated DNA length was reduced with TTFields exposure time and there was increased R-loop formation. Furthermore, as cells were exposed to TTFields a conditional vulnerability environment developed which rendered cells more susceptible to DNA damaging agents or agents that interfere with DNA repair or replication fork maintenance. The effect of TTFields exposure with concomitant exposure to cisplatin or PARP inhibition, the combination of TTFields plus concomitant PARP inhibition followed by radiation, or radiation alone at the end of a TTFields exposure were all synergistic. Finally, gene expression analysis of 47 key mitosis regulator genes suggested that TTFields-induced mitotic aberrations and DNA damage/replication stress events, although intimately linked to one another, are likely initiated independently of one another. This suggests that enhanced replication stress and reduced DNA repair capacity are also major mechanisms of TTFields effects, effects for which there are therapeutic implications.
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U2 - 10.1016/j.trsl.2019.10.003
DO - 10.1016/j.trsl.2019.10.003
M3 - Article
C2 - 31707040
AN - SCOPUS:85079454468
SN - 1931-5244
VL - 217
SP - 33
EP - 46
JO - Translational Research
JF - Translational Research
ER -