Scientific Reports (Nov 2022)

A rapid multiplex cell-free assay on biochip to evaluate functional aspects of double-strand break repair

  • Xavier Tatin,
  • Giovanna Muggiolu,
  • Sarah Libert,
  • David Béal,
  • Thierry Maillet,
  • Jean Breton,
  • Sylvie Sauvaigo

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-022-23819-0
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 1
pp. 1 – 13

Abstract

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Abstract The repair of DNA double-strand breaks (DSBs) involves interdependent molecular pathways, of which the choice is crucial for a cell’s fate when facing a damage. Growing evidence points toward the fact that DSB repair capacities correlate with disease aggressiveness, treatment response and treatment-related toxicities in cancer. Scientific and medical communities need more easy-to-use and efficient tools to rapidly estimate DSB repair capacities from a tissue, enable routine-accessible treatment personalization, and hopefully, improve survival. Here, we propose a new functional biochip assay (NEXT-SPOT) that characterizes DSB repair-engaged cellular pathways and provides qualitative and quantitative information on the contribution of several pathways in less than 2 h, from 10 mg of cell lysates. We introduce the NEXT-SPOT technology, detail the molecular characterizations of different repair steps occurring on the biochip, and show examples of DSB repair profiling using three cancer cell lines treated or not with a DSB-inducer (doxorubicin) and/or a DNA repair inhibitor (RAD51 inhibitor; DNA-PK inhibitor; PARP inhibitor). Among others, we demonstrate that NEXT-SPOT can accurately detect decreased activities in strand invasion and end-joining mechanisms following DNA-PK or RAD51 inhibition in DNA-PK-proficient cell lines. This approach offers an all-in-one reliable strategy to consider DSB repair capacities as predictive biomarkers easily translatable to the clinic.