A DNA repair pathway score predicts survival in human multiple myeloma: the potential for therapeutic strategy

DNA repair is critical to resolve extrinsic or intrinsic DNA damage to ensure regulated gene transcription and DNA replication. These pathways control repair of double strand breaks, interstrand crosslinks, and nucleotide lesions occurring on single strands. Distinct DNA repair pathways are highly i...

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Veröffentlicht in:Oncotarget 2014-05, Vol.5 (9), p.2487-2498
Hauptverfasser: Kassambara, Alboukadel, Gourzones-Dmitriev, Claire, Sahota, Surinder, Rème, Thierry, Moreaux, Jérôme, Goldschmidt, Hartmut, Constantinou, Angelos, Pasero, Philippe, Hose, Dirk, Klein, Bernard
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container_end_page 2498
container_issue 9
container_start_page 2487
container_title Oncotarget
container_volume 5
creator Kassambara, Alboukadel
Gourzones-Dmitriev, Claire
Sahota, Surinder
Rème, Thierry
Moreaux, Jérôme
Goldschmidt, Hartmut
Constantinou, Angelos
Pasero, Philippe
Hose, Dirk
Klein, Bernard
description DNA repair is critical to resolve extrinsic or intrinsic DNA damage to ensure regulated gene transcription and DNA replication. These pathways control repair of double strand breaks, interstrand crosslinks, and nucleotide lesions occurring on single strands. Distinct DNA repair pathways are highly inter-linked for the fast and optimal DNA repair. A deregulation of DNA repair pathways may maintain and promote genetic instability and drug resistance to genotoxic agents in tumor cells by specific mechanisms that tolerate or rapidly bypass lesions to drive proliferation and abrogate cell death. Multiple Myeloma (MM) is a plasma cell disorder characterized by genetic instability and poor outcome for some patients, in which the compendium of DNA repair pathways has as yet not been assessed for a disease-specific prognostic relevance. We design a DNA repair risk score based on the expression of genes coding for proteins involved in DNA repair in MM cells. From a consensus list of 84 DNA repair genes, 17 had a bad prognostic value and 5 a good prognostic value for both event-free and overall survival of previously-untreated MM patients. The prognostic information provided by these 22 prognostic genes was summed within a global DNA repair score (DRScore) to take into account the tight linkage of repair pathways. DRscore was strongly predictive for both patients' event free and overall survivals. Also, DRscore has the potential to identify MM patients whose tumor cells are dependent on specific DNA repair pathways to design treatments that induce synthetic lethality by exploiting addiction to deregulated DNA repair pathways.
doi_str_mv 10.18632/oncotarget.1740
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These pathways control repair of double strand breaks, interstrand crosslinks, and nucleotide lesions occurring on single strands. Distinct DNA repair pathways are highly inter-linked for the fast and optimal DNA repair. A deregulation of DNA repair pathways may maintain and promote genetic instability and drug resistance to genotoxic agents in tumor cells by specific mechanisms that tolerate or rapidly bypass lesions to drive proliferation and abrogate cell death. Multiple Myeloma (MM) is a plasma cell disorder characterized by genetic instability and poor outcome for some patients, in which the compendium of DNA repair pathways has as yet not been assessed for a disease-specific prognostic relevance. We design a DNA repair risk score based on the expression of genes coding for proteins involved in DNA repair in MM cells. 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subjects Aged
Biochemistry, Molecular Biology
Biomarkers, Tumor - analysis
Cancer
Computational Biology
DNA Damage - genetics
DNA Repair - genetics
DNA Repair Enzymes - genetics
Female
Genomics
Hematology
Human health and pathology
Humans
Life Sciences
Male
Multiple Myeloma - genetics
Multiple Myeloma - mortality
Multiple Myeloma - therapy
Predictive Value of Tests
Research Paper
Signal Transduction
Survival Rate
title A DNA repair pathway score predicts survival in human multiple myeloma: the potential for therapeutic strategy
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