The Journal of Pathology: Clinical Research (Jul 2023)

Altered cytoplasmic and nuclear ADP‐ribosylation levels analyzed with an improved ADP‐ribose binder are a prognostic factor in renal cell carcinoma

  • Peter Schraml,
  • Fabio Aimi,
  • Martin Zoche,
  • Domingo Aguilera‐Garcia,
  • Fabian Arnold,
  • Holger Moch,
  • Michael O Hottiger

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1002/cjp2.320
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9, no. 4
pp. 273 – 284

Abstract

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Abstract ADP‐ribosylation (ADPR) of proteins is catalyzed by ADP‐ribosyltransferases, which are targeted by inhibitors (i.e. poly(ADP‐ribose) polymerase inhibitors [PARPi]). Although renal cell carcinoma (RCC) cells are sensitive in vitro to PARPi, studies on the association between ADPR levels and somatic loss of function mutations in DNA damage repair genes are currently missing. Here we observed, in two clear cell RCC (ccRCC) patient cohorts (n = 257 and n = 241) stained with an engineered ADP‐ribose binding macrodomain (eAf1521), that decreased cytoplasmic ADPR (cyADPR) levels significantly correlated with late tumor stage, high‐ISUP (the International Society of Urological Pathology) grade, presence of necrosis, dense lymphocyte infiltration, and worse patient survival (p < 0.01 each). cyADPR proved to be an independent prognostic factor (p = 0.001). Comparably, absence of nuclear ADPR staining in ccRCC correlated with absence of PARP1 staining (p < 0.01) and worse patient outcome (p < 0.05). In papillary RCC the absence of cyADPR was also significantly associated with tumor progression and worse patient outcome (p < 0.05 each). To interrogate whether the ADPR status could be associated with genetic alterations in DNA repair, chromatin remodeling, and histone modulation, we performed DNA sequence analysis and identified a significant association of increased ARID1A mutations in ccRCCcyADPR+++/PARP1+ compared with ccRCCcyADPR−/PARP1− (31% versus 4%; p < 0.05). Collectively, our data suggest the prognostic value of nuclear and cytoplasmic ADPR levels in RCC that might be further influenced by genetic alterations.

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