Krebs-cycle-deficient hereditary cancer syndromes are defined by defects in homologous-recombination DNA repair.

Journal: Nature Genetics
Published:
Abstract

The hereditary cancer syndromes hereditary leiomyomatosis and renal cell cancer (HLRCC) and succinate dehydrogenase-related hereditary paraganglioma and pheochromocytoma (SDH PGL/PCC) are linked to germline loss-of-function mutations in genes encoding the Krebs cycle enzymes fumarate hydratase and succinate dehydrogenase, thus leading to elevated levels of fumarate and succinate, respectively1-3. Here, we report that fumarate and succinate both suppress the homologous recombination (HR) DNA-repair pathway required for the resolution of DNA double-strand breaks (DSBs) and for the maintenance of genomic integrity, thus rendering tumor cells vulnerable to synthetic-lethal targeting with poly(ADP)-ribose polymerase (PARP) inhibitors. These results identify HLRCC and SDH PGL/PCC as familial DNA-repair deficiency syndromes, providing a mechanistic basis to explain their cancer predisposition and suggesting a potentially therapeutic approach for advanced HLRCC and SDH PGL/PCC, both of which are incurable when metastatic.

Authors
Parker Sulkowski, Ranjini Sundaram, Sebastian Oeck, Christopher Corso, Yanfeng Liu, Seth Noorbakhsh, Monica Niger, Marta Boeke, Daiki Ueno, Aravind Kalathil, Xun Bao, Jing Li, Brian Shuch, Ranjit Bindra, Peter Glazer