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Oncogenic Impact of TONSL, a Homologous Recombination Repair Protein at the Replication Fork, in Cancer Stem Cellsopen access

Authors
Lee, HaniHa, SojungChoi, Seok GyeongDo, SoominYoon, SukjoonKim, Yong KeeKim, Woo-Young
Issue Date
May-2023
Publisher
MDPI
Keywords
TONSL; CSC; MYC; double-strand DNA damage repair; homologous recombination repairs
Citation
INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF MOLECULAR SCIENCES, v.24, no.11
Journal Title
INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF MOLECULAR SCIENCES
Volume
24
Number
11
URI
https://scholarworks.sookmyung.ac.kr/handle/2020.sw.sookmyung/151750
DOI
10.3390/ijms24119530
ISSN
1661-6596
1422-0067
Abstract
We investigated the role of TONSL, a mediator of homologous recombination repair (HRR), in stalled replication fork double-strand breaks (DSBs) in cancer. Publicly available clinical data (tumors from the ovary, breast, stomach and lung) were analyzed through KM Plotter, cBioPortal and Qomics. Cancer stem cell (CSC)-enriched cultures and bulk/general mixed cell cultures (BCCs) with RNAi were employed to determine the effect of TONSL loss in cancer cell lines from the ovary, breast, stomach, lung, colon and brain. Limited dilution assays and ALDH assays were used to quantify the loss of CSCs. Western blotting and cell-based homologous recombination assays were used to identify DNA damage derived from TONSL loss. TONSL was expressed at higher levels in cancer tissues than in normal tissues, and higher expression was an unfavorable prognostic marker for lung, stomach, breast and ovarian cancers. Higher expression of TONSL is partly associated with the coamplification of TONSL and MYC, suggesting its oncogenic role. The suppression of TONSL using RNAi revealed that it is required in the survival of CSCs in cancer cells, while BCCs could frequently survive without TONSL. TONSL dependency occurs through accumulated DNA damage-induced senescence and apoptosis in TONSL-suppressed CSCs. The expression of several other major mediators of HRR was also associated with worse prognosis, whereas the expression of error-prone nonhomologous end joining molecules was associated with better survival in lung adenocarcinoma. Collectively, these results suggest that TONSL-mediated HRR at the replication fork is critical for CSC survival; targeting TONSL may lead to the effective eradication of CSCs.
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