Mapping the Subtype-Specific PARP1 ADP-ribosylated Proteome in Breast Cancer Cells

Read the full article See related articles

Discuss this preprint

Start a discussion What are Sciety discussions?

Listed in

This article is not in any list yet, why not save it to one of your lists.
Log in to save this article

Abstract

Breast cancers are molecularly heterogeneous, with subtype-specific differences in transcriptional programs, chromatin architecture, and therapeutic responses. While PARP1 has been extensively studied in the context of DNA repair, emerging evidence implicates its catalytic activity in a broader set of cellular processes, including the regulation of gene expression. Here, we employed an NAD analog-sensitive PARP1 (asPARP1) chemical genetics approach combined with mass spectrometry to map the ADP-ribosylated proteome across six human breast cancer cell lines representing luminal and basal/triple negative subtypes. We identified thousands of PARP1 substrates and hundreds of Glu/Asp ADPRylation sites, revealing both shared and subtype-specific modifications in cell lines maintained under basal growth conditions. Luminal-specific substrates were enriched in chromatin and transcriptional regulators, whereas basal-specific substrates were preferentially linked to translation and RNA processing, highlighting lineage-dependent PARP1 activity. Transcription factors emerged as major substrates, with TFAP2A serving as a proof-of-concept; it is selectively ADPRylated in luminal cells and inhibition of PARP1-mediated ADPRylation modulates its promoter occupancy in a subtype-specific manner. Our data provide a new resource for studying subtype-specific PARP1-mediated ADPRylation in breast cancer cells. Collectively, our findings expand the conceptual framework for PARP1 function beyond DNA repair, offering mechanistic insights into subtype-specific gene regulation and potential determinants of PARP inhibitor sensitivity in breast cancer.

Article activity feed