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Decatenation checkpoint‐defective melanomas are dependent on PI3K for survival
Authors:Kelly Brooks  Max Ranall  Loredana Spoerri  Alex Stevenson  Gency Gunasingh  Sandra Pavey  Fred Meunier  Thomas J. Gonda  Brian Gabrielli
Affiliation:1. Translational Research Institute, The University of Queensland Diamantina Institute, , Brisbane, Qld, Australia;2. Clem Jones Centre for Ageing Dementia Research, Queensland Brain Institute, The University of Queensland, , Brisbane, Qld, Australia
Abstract:Melanoma cell lines are commonly defective for the G2‐phase cell cycle checkpoint that responds to incomplete catenation of the replicated chromosomes. Here, we demonstrate that melanomas defective for this checkpoint response are less sensitive to genotoxic stress, suggesting that the defective cell lines compensated for the checkpoint loss by increasing their ability to cope with DNA damage. We performed an siRNA kinome screen to identify kinases responsible and identified PI3K pathway components. Checkpoint‐defective cell lines were three‐fold more sensitive to small molecule inhibitors of PI3K. The PI3K inhibitor PF‐05212384 promoted apoptosis in the checkpoint‐defective lines, and the increased sensitivity to PI3K inhibition correlated with increased levels of activated Akt. This work demonstrates that increased PI3K pathway activation is a necessary adaption for the continued viability of melanomas with a defective decatenation checkpoint.
Keywords:decatenation checkpoint  melanoma  synthetic lethality  PI3K
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