A CRISPR-drug perturbational map for identifying compounds to combine with commonly used chemotherapeutics

Combination chemotherapy is crucial for successfully treating cancer. However, the enormous number of possible drug combinations means discovering safe and effective combinations remains a significant challenge. To improve this process, we conduct large-scale targeted CRISPR knockout screens in drug...

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Veröffentlicht in:Nature communications 2023-11, Vol.14 (1), p.7332-7332, Article 7332
Hauptverfasser: Lee, Hyeong-Min, Wright, William C., Pan, Min, Low, Jonathan, Currier, Duane, Fang, Jie, Singh, Shivendra, Nance, Stephanie, Delahunty, Ian, Kim, Yuna, Chapple, Richard H., Zhang, Yinwen, Liu, Xueying, Steele, Jacob A., Qi, Jun, Pruett-Miller, Shondra M., Easton, John, Chen, Taosheng, Yang, Jun, Durbin, Adam D., Geeleher, Paul
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Combination chemotherapy is crucial for successfully treating cancer. However, the enormous number of possible drug combinations means discovering safe and effective combinations remains a significant challenge. To improve this process, we conduct large-scale targeted CRISPR knockout screens in drug-treated cells, creating a genetic map of druggable genes that sensitize cells to commonly used chemotherapeutics. We prioritize neuroblastoma, the most common extracranial pediatric solid tumor, where ~50% of high-risk patients do not survive. Our screen examines all druggable gene knockouts in 18 cell lines (10 neuroblastoma, 8 others) treated with 8 widely used drugs, resulting in 94,320 unique combination-cell line perturbations, which is comparable to the largest existing drug combination screens. Using dense drug-drug rescreening, we find that the top CRISPR-nominated drug combinations are more synergistic than standard-of-care combinations, suggesting existing combinations could be improved. As proof of principle, we discover that inhibition of PRKDC, a component of the non-homologous end-joining pathway, sensitizes high-risk neuroblastoma cells to the standard-of-care drug doxorubicin in vitro and in vivo using patient-derived xenograft (PDX) models. Our findings provide a valuable resource and demonstrate the feasibility of using targeted CRISPR knockout to discover combinations with common chemotherapeutics, a methodology with application across all cancers. Combining chemotherapeutics can be beneficial but identifying effective combinations from the vast array of possibilities is resource and time consuming. Here, the authors perform a high-throughput targeted CRISPR knock-out screen identify druggable gene targets which alter sensitivity to chemotherapies. In doing so, they identify DNA-PK inhibition as a sensitiser of neuroblastomas to doxorubicin.
ISSN:2041-1723
2041-1723
DOI:10.1038/s41467-023-43134-0