Investigator

Agnieszka Śliwińska

Head/ Associate Professor · Medical University of Lodz, Department of Nucleic Acid Biochemistry

Agnieszka Śliwińs…
Papers(4)
Olaparib Combined wit…Molecular mechanisms …Uncovering miRNA–mRNA…PARP Inhibition Incre…
Collaborators(10)
Agnieszka MarczakAneta RogalskaArkadiusz GajekŁukasz BiegałaMichał MikulaIzabela Szymczak-PajorPatrycja GralewskaMałgorzata StatkiewiczDamian KołatNatalia Rusetska
Institutions(3)
Medical University Of…University of ŁódźMaria Sklodowska-Curi…

Papers

Olaparib Combined with DDR Inhibitors Effectively Prevents EMT and Affects miRNA Regulation in TP53-Mutated Epithelial Ovarian Cancer Cell Lines

Epithelial ovarian cancer (EOC) remains a leading cause of gynecologic cancer mortality. Despite advances in treatment, metastatic progression and resistance to standard therapies significantly worsen patient outcomes. Epithelial–mesenchymal transition (EMT) is a critical process in metastasis, enabling cancer cells to gain invasive and migratory capabilities, often driven by changing miRNA expression involved in the regulation of pathological processes like drug resistance. Targeted therapies like PARP inhibitors (PARPi) have improved outcomes, particularly in BRCA-mutated and DNA repair-deficient tumors; however, resistance and limited efficacy in advanced stages remain challenges. Recent studies highlight the potential synergy of PARPi with DNA damage response (DDR) inhibitors, such as ATR and CHK1 inhibitors, which disrupt cancer cell survival pathways under stress. This study investigated the combined effects of olaparib with ATR and CHK1 inhibitors (ATRi and CHK1i) on migration, invasion, and EMT-related protein expression and miRNA expression in ovarian cancer cell lines OV-90 and SKOV-3. The results demonstrated enhanced cytotoxicity, inhibition of migration and invasion, and modulation of miRNAs linked to metastasis. These findings suggest that combination therapies targeting DNA repair and cell cycle pathways may offer a novel, more effective approach to managing advanced EOC and reducing metastatic spread.

Molecular mechanisms restoring olaparib efficacy through ATR/CHK1 pathway inhibition in olaparib-resistant BRCA1/2MUT ovarian cancer models

Resistance to olaparib inevitably develops in ovarian cancer (OC) patients, highlighting the necessity for effective strategies to improve its efficacy. Here, we established a novel olaparib-resistant patient-derived xenograft model of high-grade serous OC with BRCA1/2 mutations and examined the molecular characteristics of acquired resistance and resensitization to olaparib in treatment-naïve tumors in vivo. Olaparib-resistant xenografts were treated with olaparib, ATR inhibitor (ATRi, ceralasertib), CHK1 inhibitor (CHK1i, MK-8776) or their combinations. Proliferation, apoptosis, ATR/CHK1 activity, PARP signaling, DNA damage response (DDR), epithelial-to-mesenchymal transition (EMT), and MDR1 expression, were examined via RT-qPCR, western blot, and immunohistochemistry. Resistant tumors exhibited defects in PARP and ATR/CHK1 signaling, accompanied by altered expression of proteins involved in DDR and EMT. Olaparib rechallenge combined with ATR/CHK1 inhibitors showed promising synergistic effects on tumor growth inhibition. Mechanistically, combined treatments suppressed tumor proliferation without increasing apoptosis or necrosis, while inducing tumor cell vacuolization indicative of cell death. ATRi combined with olaparib induced or augmented downregulation of ATR, CHK1, PARP1, PARG, BRCA1, γH2AX, and PARylated protein expression, while reversing olaparib-induced upregulation of vimentin, BRCA2, and 53BP1. Our collective findings indicate that ATR/CHK1 pathway inhibition restores the olaparib efficacy in resistant BRCA1/2

Uncovering miRNA–mRNA Regulatory Networks Related to Olaparib Resistance and Resensitization of BRCA2MUT Ovarian Cancer PEO1-OR Cells with the ATR/CHK1 Pathway Inhibitors

Resistance to olaparib is the major obstacle in targeted therapy for ovarian cancer (OC) with poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase inhibitors (PARPis), prompting studies on novel combination therapies to enhance olaparib efficacy. Despite identifying various mechanisms, understanding how OC cells acquire PARPi resistance remains incomplete. This study investigated microRNA (miRNA) expression in olaparib-sensitive (PEO1, PEO4) and previously established olaparib-resistant OC cell lines (PEO1-OR) using high-throughput RT-qPCR and bioinformatic analyses. The role of miRNAs was explored regarding acquired resistance and resensitization with the ATR/CHK1 pathway inhibitors. Differentially expressed miRNAs were used to construct miRNA–mRNA regulatory networks and perform functional enrichment analyses for target genes with miRNet 2.0. TCGA-OV dataset was analyzed to explore the prognostic value of selected miRNAs and target genes in clinical samples. We identified potential processes associated with olaparib resistance, including cell proliferation, migration, cell cycle, and growth factor signaling. Resensitized PEO1-OR cells were enriched in growth factor signaling via PDGF, EGFR, FGFR1, VEGFR2, and TGFβR, regulation of the cell cycle via the G2/M checkpoint, and caspase-mediated apoptosis. Antibody microarray analysis confirmed dysregulated growth factor expression. The addition of the ATR/CHK1 pathway inhibitors to olaparib downregulated FGF4, FGF6, NT-4, PLGF, and TGFβ1 exclusively in PEO1-OR cells. Survival and differential expression analyses for serous OC patients revealed prognostic miRNAs likely associated with olaparib resistance (miR-99b-5p, miR-424-3p, and miR-505-5p) and resensitization to olaparib (miR-324-5p and miR-424-3p). Essential miRNA–mRNA interactions were reconstructed based on prognostic miRNAs and target genes. In conclusion, our data highlight distinct miRNA profiles in olaparib-sensitive and olaparib-resistant cells, offering molecular insights into overcoming resistance with the ATR/CHK1 inhibitors in OC. Moreover, some miRNAs might serve as potential predictive signature molecules of resistance and therapeutic response.

PARP Inhibition Increases the Reliance on ATR/CHK1 Checkpoint Signaling Leading to Synthetic Lethality—An Alternative Treatment Strategy for Epithelial Ovarian Cancer Cells Independent from HR Effectiveness

Poly (ADP-ribose) polymerase inhibitor (PARPi, olaparib) impairs the repair of DNA single-strand breaks (SSBs), resulting in double-strand breaks (DSBs) that cannot be repaired efficiently in homologous recombination repair (HRR)-deficient cancers such as BRCA1/2-mutant cancers, leading to synthetic lethality. Despite the efficacy of olaparib in the treatment of BRCA1/2 deficient tumors, PARPi resistance is common. We hypothesized that the combination of olaparib with anticancer agents that disrupt HRR by targeting ataxia telangiectasia and Rad3-related protein (ATR) or checkpoint kinase 1 (CHK1) may be an effective strategy to reverse ovarian cancer resistance to olaparib. Here, we evaluated the effect of olaparib, the ATR inhibitor AZD6738, and the CHK1 inhibitor MK8776 alone and in combination on cell survival, colony formation, replication stress response (RSR) protein expression, DNA damage, and apoptotic changes in BRCA2 mutated (PEO-1) and HRR-proficient BRCA wild-type (SKOV-3 and OV-90) cells. Combined treatment caused the accumulation of DNA DSBs. PARP expression was associated with sensitivity to olaparib or inhibitors of RSR. Synergistic effects were weaker when olaparib was combined with CHK1i and occurred regardless of the BRCA2 status of tumor cells. Because PARPi increases the reliance on ATR/CHK1 for genome stability, the combination of PARPi with ATR inhibition suppressed ovarian cancer cell growth independently of the efficacy of HRR. The present results were obtained at sub-lethal doses, suggesting the potential of these inhibitors as monotherapy as well as in combination with olaparib.

139Works
4Papers
11Collaborators
HyperglycemiaOvarian NeoplasmsPancreatic NeoplasmsCell Line, TumorTumor Suppressor Protein p53ApoptosisMetabolic DiseasesMetabolic Syndrome

Positions

2020–

Head/ Associate Professor

Medical University of Lodz · Department of Nucleic Acid Biochemistry

2016–

Head/Assitant Professor

Medical University of Lodz · Department of Nucleic Acid Biochemistry

2006–

senior assistant

Medical University of Lodz · Department of inetrnal Disease, Diabtology and Clinical Pharmacology

Education

2008

PhD

Medical University of Lodz · Department of Internal Disease, Diabetology and Clinical Pharmacology

2004

Msc

University of Lodz · Department of Molecular Genetics