Chromosome 8p engineering reveals increased metastatic potential targetable by patient-specific synthetic lethality in liver cancer.
Thorben HuthEmely C DreherSteffen LemkeSarah FritzscheRaisatun N SugiyantoDarko CastvenDavid IbbersonCarsten StichtEva EiteneuerAnna JauchStefan PuschThomas AlbrechtBenjamin GoeppertJulián CandiaXin Wei WangJunfang JiJens U MarquardtSven NahnsenPeter SchirmacherStephanie RoesslerPublished in: Science advances (2023)
Large-scale chromosomal aberrations are prevalent in human cancer, but their function remains poorly understood. We established chromosome-engineered hepatocellular carcinoma cell lines using CRISPR-Cas9 genome editing. A 33-mega-base pair region on chromosome 8p (chr8p) was heterozygously deleted, mimicking a frequently observed chromosomal deletion. Using this isogenic model system, we delineated the functional consequences of chr8p loss and its impact on metastatic behavior and patient survival. We found that metastasis-associated genes on chr8p act in concert to induce an aggressive and invasive phenotype characteristic for chr8p-deleted tumors. Genome-wide CRISPR-Cas9 viability screening in isogenic chr8p-deleted cells served as a powerful tool to find previously unidentified synthetic lethal targets and vulnerabilities accompanying patient-specific chromosomal alterations. Using this target identification strategy, we showed that chr8p deletion sensitizes tumor cells to targeting of the reactive oxygen sanitizing enzyme Nudix hydrolase 17. Thus, chromosomal engineering allowed for the identification of novel synthetic lethalities specific to chr8p loss of heterozygosity.