ALK Knock-In Reporter Reveals APE1 as a Negative Regulator of EML4-ALK Formation
Matvey M. Murashko, Ekaterina M. Stasevich, Kirill V. Korneev, Anna D. Dorfman, Denis E. Demin, Elvina A. Prikhodko, Elina A. Zheremyan, Aksinya N. Uvarova, Anton M. Schwartz, Dmitry V. KuprashChromosomal rearrangements that lead to the formation of oncogenic gene fusions, such as EML4-ALK, are thought to arise from incorrect repair of double-strand breaks in DNA. However, the mechanisms and factors driving rearrangement formation remain poorly understood, and analysis of these processes is limited by detection methods that are labor-intensive, low-throughput, and not readily quantitative at single-cell resolution. Here, we developed a genetically encoded ALK reporter based on A549 lung adenocarcinoma cells, created by inserting an ALK-P2A-mCherry cassette into the endogenous ALK locus, so that induced EML4-ALK fusion activated mCherry fluorescence. Reporter activation yielded a readily quantifiable mCherry-positive subpopulation that could be measured and enriched by flow cytometry and correlated with EML4-ALK levels. Using this platform, we combined CRISPR-mediated rearrangement induction with knockdown of DNA repair factors using RNA interference. Of the factors involved in base excision repair, homologous recombination-related pathways and canonical non-homologous end joining, knockdown of the APEX1 gene encoding apurinic endonuclease 1 (APE1) selectively increased EML4-ALK levels both in the reporter cell line and in parental A549 cells. Together, this work provides a sensitive, single-cell A549-based ALK reporter platform and a framework for future studies aimed at identifying cellular and environmental factors that modulate oncogenic EML4-ALK rearrangement formation.