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Gemcitabine and ATR inhibitors synergize to kill PDAC cells by blocking DNA damage response.

Molecular systems biology 2025 Vol.21(3) p. 231-253

Höfer S, Frasch L, Brajkovic S, Putzker K, Lewis J, Schürmann H, Leone V, Sakhteman A, The M, Bayer FP, Müller J, Hamood F, Siveke JT, Reichert M, Kuster B

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The DNA-damaging agent Gemcitabine (GEM) is a first-line treatment for pancreatic cancer, but chemoresistance is frequently observed.

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APA Höfer S, Frasch L, et al. (2025). Gemcitabine and ATR inhibitors synergize to kill PDAC cells by blocking DNA damage response.. Molecular systems biology, 21(3), 231-253. https://doi.org/10.1038/s44320-025-00085-6
MLA Höfer S, et al.. "Gemcitabine and ATR inhibitors synergize to kill PDAC cells by blocking DNA damage response.." Molecular systems biology, vol. 21, no. 3, 2025, pp. 231-253.
PMID 39838187

Abstract

The DNA-damaging agent Gemcitabine (GEM) is a first-line treatment for pancreatic cancer, but chemoresistance is frequently observed. Several clinical trials investigate the efficacy of GEM in combination with targeted drugs, including kinase inhibitors, but the experimental evidence for such rationale is often unclear. Here, we phenotypically screened 13 human pancreatic adenocarcinoma (PDAC) cell lines against GEM in combination with 146 clinical inhibitors and observed strong synergy for the ATR kinase inhibitor Elimusertib in most cell lines. Dose-dependent phosphoproteome profiling of four ATR inhibitors following DNA damage induction by GEM revealed a strong block of the DNA damage response pathway, including phosphorylated pS468 of CHEK1, as the underlying mechanism of drug synergy. The current work provides a strong rationale for why the combination of GEM and ATR inhibition may be useful for the treatment of PDAC patients and constitutes a rich phenotypic and molecular resource for further investigating effective drug combinations.

MeSH Terms

Humans; Gemcitabine; Deoxycytidine; DNA Damage; Ataxia Telangiectasia Mutated Proteins; Cell Line, Tumor; Drug Synergism; Pancreatic Neoplasms; Checkpoint Kinase 1; Protein Kinase Inhibitors; Phosphorylation