Integrative genomics identifies SHPRH as a tumor suppressor gene in lung adenocarcinoma that regulates DNA damage response

Background Identification of driver mutations and development of targeted therapies has considerably improved outcomes for lung cancer patients. However, significant limitations remain with the lack of identified drivers in a large subset of patients. Here, we aimed to assess the genomic landscape of lung adenocarcinomas (LUADs) from individuals without a history of tobacco use to reveal new genetic drivers of lung cancer. Methods Integrative genomic analyses combining whole-exome sequencing, copy number, and mutational information for 83 LUAD tumors was performed and validated using external datasets to identify genetic variants with a predicted functional consequence and assess association with clinical outcomes. LUAD cell lines with alteration of identified candidates were used to functionally characterize tumor suppressive potential using a conditional expression system both in vitro and in vivo. Results We identified 21 genes with evidence of positive selection, including 12 novel candidates that have yet to be characterized in LUAD. In particular, SNF2 Histone Linker PHD RING Helicase (SHPRH) was identified due to its frequency of biallelic disruption and location within the familial susceptibility locus on chromosome arm 6q. We found that low SHPRH mRNA expression is associated with poor survival outcomes in LUAD patients. Furthermore, we showed that re-expression of SHPRH in LUAD cell lines with inactivating alterations for SHPRH reduces their in vitro colony formation and tumor burden in vivo. Finally, we explored the biological pathways associated SHPRH inactivation and found an association with the tolerance of LUAD cells to DNA damage. Conclusions These data suggest that SHPRH is a tumor suppressor gene in LUAD, whereby its expression is associated with more favorable patient outcomes, reduced tumor and mutational burden, and may serve as a predictor of response to DNA damage. Thus, further exploration into the role of SHPRH in LUAD development may make it a valuable biomarker for predicting LUAD risk and prognosis.


INTRODUCTION
Globally, lung cancer is the leading cause of cancer mortality in both men and women, responsible for over 1.8 million deaths a year [1].Approximately 85% of lung cancers are classified as non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC), with lung adenocarcinoma (LUAD) the most common histological subtype, followed by squamous cell carcinoma (SCC) [2].Incidence rates for LUAD have proportionally increased when compared to other NSCLC subtypes over the past few years.A greater understanding of the drivers of lung cancer development and progression is urgently needed in order to define new strategies for risk assessment, prevention, early diagnosis, and treatment.
The majority of lung cancers are diagnosed at an advanced stage, which limits the potential for patients to undergo possibly curative surgical resection and contributes to a 5-year survival rate of only 22% [2][3][4].Advances in genomic profiling technologies have led to the identification of several genetic drivers of lung cancer and the development of drugs to target these aberrations [5].However, while the successes of targeted therapy are numerousincluding an increased quality of life for treated patientssignificant challenges continue to remain.Of note, many tumors harbor mutations in uncharacterized genes or genes that are non-actionable due to difficulty of drug development.In addition, patients with lung tumors that initially respond to targeted therapies eventually develop resistance.Therefore, identification of novel genetic drivers can further elucidate strategies to better treat patients with mutations in these genes, independently or in combination with other targetable genetic drivers.
While the most well-established risk factor for lung cancer is smoking, about 28% of lung cancers diagnosed in Canada occur in people who have never smoked [2,6].As the mutation rate in patients who have never smoked is much lower than in smokers, there are fewer passenger gene mutations that obscure driver gene identification [7].Many lung cancer oncogenes were originally characterized through the analysis of lung tumors from never smokers (NSs), most notably EGFR [8].Thus, assessment of tumors from NS patients offers an opportunity to better understand the biology of the disease.Importantly, targets and drugs developed for the treatment of lung cancer in NSs can also be used to treat patients that have smoked with mutations in the respective drivers.
In this study, we aimed to assess the genomic landscape of LUADs in order to reveal new genetic drivers of lung cancer.We hypothesized that focusing on NS lung tumors would enrich identification of cancer drivers relative to passenger mutations, aiding in gene discovery.Using integrative genomic analyses including next generation sequencing of 83 in-house LUADs and validation in external cohorts, we identified 21 significantly mutated genes through our computational pipeline that assessed for evidence of positive selection, of which 12 were novel candidates that have yet to be characterized in LUAD.SNF2 Histone Linker PHD RING Helicase (SHPRH) was uncovered as a candidate of interest due to its frequency of double allelic disruption and location within the main lung cancer susceptibility locus on chromosome arm 6q [9].We subsequently found that in addition to mutation, SHPRH copy number alterations in LUAD tumors and cell lines reduce SHPRH expression and that low SHPRH expression is associated with worse clinical outcomes in LUAD patients.Furthermore, we demonstrate that re-expression of SHPRH in LUAD cells with inactivating alterations reduces their tumorigenic potential in vitro and in vivo, highlighting SHPRH as a novel tumor suppressor gene in LUAD.Finally, investigation into the role of SHPRH expression in LUAD tumors suggests that it may confer a protective effect against DNA damaging agents.Together, this work suggests that SHPRH is a tumor suppressor gene in LUAD whose expression is associated with reduced LUAD development and more favorable prognosis andcoupled with its chromosomal location in a susceptibility locus and role in DNA damage tolerancewarrants further assessment as a potential biomarker for individuals at-risk of developing LUAD.

MATERIALS AND METHODS Sequencing and variant calling
A panel of 15 NS LUAD tumors and matched normal lung tissues were obtained from BCCA under informed consent as previously described [10].Whole-exome sequencing (WES) using the Illumina platform was performed at the NIH Intramural Sequencing Center (NISC) according to standard protocols and resulting BAM files were aligned to the hg19 reference genome as previously described [11,12].BCFTools [13], Varscan [14], and Freebayes [15] were used to make variant calls for tumor and matched-normal controls.'Base Quality' was set to ≥10 and 'Depth' to ≥8, while all other parameters were set at default.Resulting VCF files were sorted and normalized using BCFtools [16].Variants that were called in at least two of the three algorithms were maintained in tumors, and variants called by any one of the three algorithms were maintained in matchednormal controls.VCF files were prepared and subsequently annotated with ANNOVAR [17].

Somatic filtering
Variants that were called by any algorithm in any matched-normal control were removed from downstream consideration of somatic alteration in tumors.Variant lists were prepared for evaluation with MutScan [18] in R using manipulation with maftools [19] and dplyr [20].Fastq files were generated from BAM files using Samtools [21] for use in Mutscan.Variants with an allelic frequency in normal controls of 5% or more were removed from further consideration.Variants with no reads supporting the alternative allele but with more than 20 reads supporting the reference allele were removed.In addition, variants with less than twice the percentage of reads supporting the alternative allele compared to the percentage in the matched-normal controls were removed.Variants filtered by any of the above metrics within a sample were also removed from consideration across the entire sample set.Finally, variants that were annotated by ANNOVAR (avSNP150) as being in dbSNP [22] with a healthy population frequency of more than 1% were removed.Population frequency was determined by "PopFreqMax" by ANNOVAR [17], containing the maximum allele frequency from several databases including 1000 Genomes Project [23], ESP6500 [23,24], and ExAC [25].

Calculation of validation rate
A custom Illumina exon capture assay was designed to assess a panel of 268 genes in the 15 tumor/normal pairs analyzed by WES (above) in addition to an independent set of in-house 68 LUAD tumor and matched normal pairs.Genes selected for capture were determined through assessment of identified variants from WES and common drivers previously reported to be mutated in LUAD and other cancers.Somatic variants in genes and samples that were sequenced by custom capture were used for validation (n = 488).Variants were considered validated if 5% or more of the reads identified in MutScan [18] supported the alternative allele.

Filtering of variants for biologically relevant effects
Candidate somatic mutations were filtered for functional relevance through the following sequence.First, variants that were not annotated by ANNOVAR [17] or RefSeq [26] databases as located in protein coding or splice site regions were removed.Second, variants that were predicted to be silent at the amino acid level and not predicted by SPIDEX [27] to affect splicing (annotated by ANNOVAR, |DPSI z-score| ≥ 2) were removed.Third, variants that were in genes determined not to be expressed in NS LUAD as determined by Illumina expression microarray analysis of a panel 30 BCCA samples were removed using a pipeline previously described [28].Lastly, amino acid functional change was predicted with SIFT [29], LRT [30], MutationTaster [31], MutationAssessor [32], FATHMM [33][34][35], and MetaSVM [36] by ANNOVAR [17] and if at least half of the algorithms predicted that a variant was tolerable to protein function, the variant was removed, unless it was an indel or had a SPIDEX [27]| DPSI z-score|≥2.

Copy number analysis
Copy number processing was performed as described in previous studies [10,37].In brief, genomic DNA from the 83 LUAD tumors and matched non-malignant lung tissues were hybridized to Affymetrix SNP 6.0 arrays according to the manufacturer's instructions and the resulting normalization and copy number segmentation was performed using Partek Genomics Suite Software (Partek Incorporated, Missouri) with the same settings and downstream processing described previously [37].Resulting segmentation files were used in GISTIC 2.0 [38,39] on Gene Pattern (https://cloud.genepattern.org/gp/pages/login.jsf) with amplification threshold = 0.8, deletion threshold = −0.6,join segment size = 50, q-value threshold of 0.05, and hg19 genome build, as described previously [40].All other parameters were set to default.

Analysis of external LUAD datasets
Copy number status, methylation status (HM450) and gene expression data (RNA Seq V2 RSEM) for 230 LUAD tumors [41] were downloaded from the MSKCC cBioPortal (www.cbioportal.org)[42,43] Affymetrix U133 Plus 2 expression data for 58 LUAD tumors and exfoliated bronchial cells of 67 lung cancer-free individuals obtained during fluorescence bronchoscopy were obtained and processed as previously described [44,45].Copy number status and mRNA expression for 74 LUAD cell lines were downloaded from the Cancer Dependency Map portal (https:// depmap.org/portal/)[46,47].The Kaplan-Meier (KM) plotter (https:// kmplot.com/analysis/index.php?p=service&cancer=lung) [48] was used to evaluate the correlation between SHPRH mRNA expression (Affymetrix microarray) and OS and between SHPRH mRNA expression and PFS in LUAD patients with data downloaded from Gene Expression Omnibus (GEO) database on 14-Mar-2024.For all LUAD patients, a sample size of n = 672 for OS and n = 528 for PFS was used, with n = 140 for the NS subset.For all SCC patients, a sample size of n = 527 for OS and n = 220 for PFS was used.Samples were divided into high expression and low expression groups based on a median cutoff or lower quartile cutoff of SHPRH expression.Hazard Ratio (HR), 95% confidence interval (CI), and logrank P-value were then determined and displayed on KM survival plots.A continuous phenotype Gene Set Enrichment Analysis (GSEA) was performed on mRNA expression data obtained for 510 LUAD tumors from the TCGA PanCancer Atlas [49] dataset obtained from cBioPortal [42,43] using the GSEA software v4.3.2 [50,51] and the MSigDB Hallmark gene sets [52].The same PanCancer Atlas LUAD dataset was also used to assess the impact of SHPRH inactivation (copy number loss or mutation) on Tumor Mutational Burden, Mutation Count, and Fraction of Genome Altered for samples with available clinical information downloaded from cBioPortal.All TCGA PanCancer Atlas studies within cBioPortal were also assessed for SHPRH mutations and plotted to determine recurrent mutations that occur across cancer types.Lastly, LUAD datasets within cBioPortal with sequence and/or copy number information for SHPRH were assessed to determine alteration frequency of SHPRH in comparison to other previously established tumor suppressor genes.

Cell viability assays
5 × 10 3 cells were seeded in a 96-well plate in tet-free media or doxcontaining (100 ng/mL) media and left to grow for 92 h, after which alamarBlue cell viability agent (Life Technologies, Dal1100) was added at a 10% concentration.Cells were incubated with alamarBlue for 4 h.Fluorescence (Excitation: 540 nm, Emission: 590 nm) was measured using a Cytation 3 Multi Modal Reader with Gen5 software (BioTek).

In vivo mouse xenografts
Tumor formation was assessed in male JAX-NRG (NOD-Rag1 null IL2rg null ) mice kept on a normal or dox (Envigo Teklad, TD.130141) diet.NCI-H1395 and NCI-H2009 cells were treated with or without 100 ng/mL dox 3 days prior to injection.A549 cells were kept in normal cell culture medium. 1 × 10 6 cells in 100 µl of PBS (for NCI-H1395) or serum-free RPMI-1640 medium (for NCI-H2009) were alternately injected subcutaneously into the left and right flanks of 8-to-10-week-old mice obtained from the BCCA Animal Resource Centre.Cages were randomly assigned to either normal or dox diet.Group allocations were not blinded and exclusion criteria was pre-established prior to data collection which included injection error or humane endpoint due to ulceration.Mice that did not reach experimental endpoint were excluded from data analysis.Mean ± SEM and results from Student's paired t test are shown.All paired measurements were assumed to be random, representative samples with normal distribution and homogenous variance, allowing the use of Student's paired t test.Tumor volume was measured twice a week following injection.Experiments were terminated once tumor volume reached 2 cm 3 for a given mouse in the cohort.Tumors were harvested, weighed, and homogenized for lysate collection.

Neutral comet assay
NCI-H1395 SHPRH-DEL cells were treated with 100 ng/mL dox for 3 days.Following this, cells were treated with 0.01% MMS (v/v) or mock-treated (media change only) for 4 h.Cells were then collected and the neutral comet assay was performed according to the manufacturer's instructions for the CometAssay Reagent Kit for Single Cell Gel Electrophoresis Assay (R&D Systems, 4250-050-K).Comets were stained with 16 µg/mL Propidium Iodide (Thermo Scientific, P1304MP) and imaged on a LeicaDMi8 microscope at 10X magnification.Tail moment was obtained using an ImageJ plugin that has been previously described [57,58].Measurements were blind reviewed by individuals without prior knowledge of sample order.70 events per condition were analyzed from each independent experiment.

RNA sequencing analysis
1 ×10 6 NCI-H1395 TetO cells were seeded in triplicate into 10 cm plates.The following day, media was changed and the cells were treated for 72 h with or without 100 ng/mL of dox.Total RNA was extracted using the RNeasy Mini kit (Qiagen) according to the manufacturer's protocol.Sample quality assessment, library preparation, and RNA sequencing (RNASeq) was performed by GENEWIZ™ from Azenta Life Sciences (New Jersey, USA).RNA Integrity Numbers (RIN) for all samples were 9.5.Quality Control was performed using FastQC [59] and Illumina adapters were trimmed using CutAdapt [60].Trimmed read files were aligned to the GRCh38.p14(Release 44) reference genome using Salmon [61].R Statistical Software v. 4.3.2[62] was used for downstream analysis.A matrix of read counts was generated via the tximport v.1.30.0R package [63].Normalized TPM values were then log(n + 1) transformed using the dplyr v.1.1.4Rpackage [20], and a differential expression score for each gene was calculated for the +dox vs -dox state for both the TetO-GFP and TetO-SHPRH cell lines individually as previously described [64,65].GSEA was then performed on the resulting gene list for each cell line using the preranked GSEA function and the H: hallmark gene sets collection from the Molecular Signature Database (MSigDB).Genes were ranked according to their differential expression scores and GSEA was run with default settings.Gene sets significantly enriched in the +dox state were then cross-referenced between the TetO-SHPRH and TetO-GFP cell lines and only those found specifically in TetO-SHPRH considered.

Statistical analysis
Cox univariate regression model was used for survival analysis by KM plotter, with a log rank p-value ≤ 0.05 being considered to be statistically significant [48].Data obtained from the TCGA Lung Adenocarcinoma Dataset [41], Cancer Dependency Map portal (https://depmap.org/portal/)[46,47], and biological data was plotted and analyzed using GraphPad Prism version 8.2.1 (GraphPad Software, San Diego, CA, USA).See figure legends for the type of statistical test used for each experiment and the number of independent replicates that were performed.For cell-based experiments, data from 3-4 independent replicates were collected, and Mean ± SEM of independent replicates and results from Student's t test are shown.For in vivo experiments, based on observations from previous studies, a minimum sample size of 5 was estimated to be necessary and Mean ± SEM of independent replicates and results from Student's paired t test are shown.For both, replicates were assumed to be random, representative samples with normal distribution and homogenous variance, allowing the use of Student's t test.P values ≤ 0.05 were considered statistically significant, with *p ≤ 0.05, **p ≤ 0.01, and ***p ≤ 0.0001.For statistical analyses performed by the GSEA software v4.3.2, a NOM p-value < 0.05 and FDR q-value < 0.25 was considered to be significant.

Sequencing of LUADs from NSs reveals somatic variants with evidence of selective pressure
LUADs and matched normal lung tissues from 15 individuals without a history of tobacco use were collected under informed consent as previously described [10] (Supplementary Table 1).WES was performed with Illumina technology (Supplementary Table 2) and variant calling with three different algorithms was performed to identify somatic candidates (Supplementary Fig. 1A).These were then filtered against matched-normal tissues from the patients, MutScan reads, and healthy control population databases (e.g.dbSNP) to further confirm that the mutations occurred somatically.After filtering, 10,179 somatic mutations remained across all 15 tumors.The mutations in the NSs consisted of less C->A transversions than smokers, which is consistent with the known carcinogenic effects of tobacco smoke (Supplementary Fig. 1B, C).The 15 tumors had an average of 120.3 coding variants per tumor (Range 15-519, Supplementary Fig. 1D).Overall, the LUADs from our dataset had a functional mutational burden (median = 28 per tumor) similar to LUADs from NS in The Cancer Genome Atlas (TCGA, median = 21 per tumor), much lower than the burden observed in LUAD from individuals with a history of tobacco smoking (median = 64 per tumor, Supplementary Fig. 1E).
We next filtered the identified somatic mutations to remove variants in genes that may be mutated without functional consequence, as these would be predicted to be probable passenger mutations.Following removal of non-coding and silent variants, we searched for variants in genes that are expressed in LUADs from NSs, as it has previously been demonstrated that genes not expressed in specific cancers have a higher mutation rate due to limited selective pressure [28] (Fig. 1a).Finally, amino acid functional prediction by various algorithms [29][30][31][32][33][34][35][36] as annotated through ANNOVAR [17] was assessed and only variants with at least half of the algorithms predicting a deleterious consequence to protein function were considered as a functional amino acid substitution.Variants that were either indels, functional amino acid substitutions, or predicted to affect splicing (SPIDEX|DPSI z-score|≥2) were considered candidates, resulting in 428 variants with a predicted functional consequence across the 15 samples (Fig. 1a).The median per-sample validation rate was 87% (Supplementary Table 3), as determined by a secondary custom capture panel of select genes (see Methods).
To implicate new candidates involved in tumorigenesis, we next assessed the frequency of gene mutation, identifying 30 genes mutated in two or more of the tumors (Fig. 1a).Mutation frequency across the TCGA LUAD cohort [41] (n = 230) was also assessed to further infer prevalence in LUAD tumors from smokers and NSs.Only genes that were mutated in three or more TCGA LUADs were considered, resulting in a total of 21 candidate genes (Fig. 1a).These genes consisted of known and suspected drivers of lung cancer, as well as genes that have yet to be functionally validated or characterized in this disease.For the purposes of identifying genes that are novel and therefore attractive targets to further characterize for a role in lung cancer biology, known drivers were defined as those that are present in the COSMIC as a census gene [66] and present in lung cancer (EGFR, TP53, ERBB2, MET, RBM10, TCF3, ELN), or those genes that have a confirmed functional role or evidence of therapeutic potential as evaluated in lung cancer (PAPPA, SMARCA2).All 21 genes are shown in Fig. 1b, with the 12 novel candidates segregated in the bottom of the panel.The 12 novel candidates are: CELSR2, RNF25, KCNMA1, SHPRH, DNAH5, MAP3K5, ASCC3, SVEP1, DST, MTMR10, SEL1L and LAMA1.Hypergeometric Gene Ontology (GO) enrichment analysis of these candidates was performed for each NS LUAD tumor sample to determine if GOs were recurrently enriched across samples, revealing a range of cellular functions with which some of the candidates were annotated, while others have less defined roles to date (Fig. 1c).

Penetrance of candidate gene disruption and assessment of two-hit frequency in expanded lung cancer datasets
Genes important for tumorigenesis are typically altered by multiple mechanisms and we have previously shown that integrating different dimensions of genomic data can aid in cancer gene discovery [10,45,67].To assess the true penetrance of candidate gene alteration and highlight potentially relevant cancer genes, we assessed copy number and mutational data for the 21 genes of interest in a panel consisting of 68 additional inhouse NS and smoker LUAD tumors (Fig. 2a, Supplementary Table 4).Mutational status was determined using a custom Illumina capture-based approach while Affymetrix arrays were utilized for copy number determination across the larger LUAD cohort [10].Overall, mutation frequencies were lower than in the initial WES cohort for the majority of candidates, which may reflect differences in clinical attributes such as smoking status, ethnicity, age or gender as indicated in Fig. 2a.Oncogenes are typically affected by recurrent mutations clustered at specific genomic hotspots, leading to constitutive protein activation [68].However, only one of our candidate genes, CELSR2, a member of the flamingo subfamily of non-classic-type cadherins that is thought to have a role in cell-to-cell signaling during nervous system development, demonstrated mutation at the same residue across multiple tumors in our dataset.Thus, we postulated that many of the identified candidates may function as tumor suppressors, as mutations in these genes are commonly dispersed throughout the coding sequence and are inactivating in nature [68].Indeed, many of the candidates are mutated in conjunction with known driver genes such as EGFR and MET, suggesting they may cooperate with these oncogenes to promote tumorigenesis.Finally, genes altered at multiple genomic dimensions have been shown to be more likely to be associated with cancer development [69].For most cancer-related genes, it has been suggested that both genomic copies must be inactivated to cause a phenotypic change in tumorigenesis [70].Therefore, evidence of "two-hit" alteration can be a useful indicator of a gene's potential to behave as a tumor-suppressor.We evaluated 12 candidate genes for their frequency of "two-hit" or double alteration across both the TCGA and BCCA cohorts.The wellestablished tumor-suppressor TP53 was also evaluated for two-hit frequency as a control.Double alteration included all cases that showed evidence of loss-of-function in both alleles, including homozygous loss (deep deletion), homozygous mutation, or heterozygous mutation combined with loss of the second allele.The most frequent two-hit genes across the TCGA and BCCA cohorts included SHPRH and ASCC3, with a combined frequency of double alterations of 7% and 6%, respectively (Fig. 2b).

SHPRH as a candidate tumor suppressor gene located within the lung cancer susceptibility locus on chromosome arm 6q
The frequency of double allelic alterations (Fig. 2b) in SHPRH and ASCC3 suggest that they may be candidate tumor suppressor genes in LUAD, whereby their inactivation could contribute to LUAD development and progression.Both genes are located on chromosome 6q, a region of frequent copy number deletion in LUAD [71], with SHPRH on chromosome 6q24.3and ASCC3 on chromosome 6q16.3.Previous investigation using genome-wide linkage analysis of families with lung cancer revealed that a potential lung cancer susceptibility gene(s) resides within the chromosome 6q23-25 region [9].Because of its location within this susceptibility locus, SHPRH was determined to be the focus of our subsequent follow up to evaluate its candidacy as a tumor suppressor gene in LUAD.
Examination of copy number alterations in the TCGA LUAD dataset [41] reveals that 52.2% of LUAD tumors (n = 230) demonstrate copy number loss of SHPRH (Fig. 3a).Furthermore, lower levels of SHPRH mRNA are associated with a loss of DNA copy number (Fig. 3a), but does not appear to have an association with the methylation status of SHPRH (Supplementary Fig. 2A), suggesting that copy number alterations are the main determinant of SHPRH expression in these tumors.Further assessment of LUAD cell lines supports this observation, since SHPRH mRNA levels and DNA copy numbers are positively associated (Fig. 3b) [46].Lastly, expression of SHPRH was significantly reduced in LUAD (N = 58) in comparison to normal lung epithelium from individuals without lung cancer (N = 67), suggesting that SHPRH is downregulated/inactivated during cancer development, consistent with a tumor suppressive function (Fig. 3c).

SHPRH is mutated across different solid cancer types
To determine whether mutation of SHPRH is exclusive to LUAD, we next assessed its status across the TCGA PanCancer Atlas datasets.This revealed that SHPRH was mutated in 2.4% (251/10443) of all samples profiled, with endometrial carcinoma (11.6%), cutaneous melanoma (5.9%), colorectal adenocarcinoma (4.9%) and stomach adenocarcinoma (4.1%) having the highest mutation rate other than lung cancer (LUAD = 3.9%) (Supplementary Fig. 2C).Furthermore, assessment across cancer types revealed recurrent mutation sites in SHPRH, including mutations at G458 (non-sense or frameshift deletions in 8 cases, including LUAD), G587 (missense or frameshift deletions/insertions in 8 cases) and R1365 (R1365C in 5 cases).Indeed, many of the mutations found in LUAD occurred in other cancer types, including those at S93 (3 cases), G183 (2 cases), G458 (8 cases), S725 (2 cases) and R1560 (2 cases) (Supplementary Fig. 2D).Together, this suggest that SHPRH may be inactivated in many aggressive solid cancer types in addition to LUAD, with recurrent mutations providing potential evidence of positive selection during tumor evolution.

Reduced SHPRH expression is associated with lower rates of survival in LUAD patients
To explore the clinical implications of SHPRH expression, we assessed survival of LUAD patients in comparison with the levels of SHPRH mRNA in their tumors.Patients with LUAD tumors that have low SHPRH expression (as determined by a median cutoff for SHPRH mRNA expression) have significantly worse overall survival (OS) (N = 672) and progression-free survival (PFS) (N = 443) than patients with tumors that have high SHPRH expression (Fig. 3d, top).This trend also persists when assessing only NS LUAD patients (N = 140) (Fig. 3d, bottom).To better represent the proportion of LUAD patients that have a double alteration of SHPRH, we further performed survival analysis on a lower quartile cutoff for SHPRH mRNA expression and observe a similar association where patients whose tumors have low SHPRH expression have poorer disease outcomes, regardless of smoking status (Supplementary Fig. 3A).In contrast, assessment of SCC patients does not reveal an association between SHPRH mRNA expression and disease outcomes (Supplementary Fig. 3B).Taken together, this suggests that SHPRH may be a candidate tumor suppressor gene with a clinical impact specifically in patients with LUAD tumors.

Re-expression of SHPRH in lung adenocarcinoma cells with inactivating alterations leads to tumor suppression in vitro and in vivo
We next assessed whether re-expression of SHPRH in LUAD cell lines with biallelic inactivation or mutation of SHPRH would decrease their tumorigenic potential.NCI-H1395 has a homozygous deletion of SHPRH (NCI-H1395 SHPRH-DEL ), while NCI-H2009 has a nonsense mutation at E41 (NCI-H2009 SHPRH-E41* ).Using a doxycycline(dox)-inducible lentivirus vector system, we transduced these cells to conditionally express SHPRH (TetO SHPRH) or GFP as a control (TetO GFP) (Fig. 4a).This system was also introduced in PC9s, which are wildtype for SHPRH (PC9 SHPRH-WT ) (Fig. 4a).
Re-expression of SHPRH in NCI-H1395 SHPRH-DEL and NCI-H2009 SHPRH-E41* does not alter cell viability after 4 days    (Supplementary Fig. 4).However, evaluation of colony growth over longer periods of time shows that re-expression of SHPRH in NCI-H1395 SHPRH-DEL significantly reduces the number of anchorage-independent colonies formed in agar, while reexpression of SHPRH in NCI-H2009 SHPRH-E41* significantly reduces both anchorage-dependent and -independent colony formation (Fig. 4b, c).In contrast, overexpression of SHPRH in PC9 SHPRH-WT does not confer any differences in colony formation (Fig. 4b, c).This suggests that sustained re-expression of SHPRH in cell lines with inactivating alterations of SHPRH can affect their tumorigenic potential, but overexpression in cell lines with functional SHPRH has limited consequences.Re-expression of SHPRH in another homozygous deletion cell line (NCI-H1623 SHPRH-DEL ) and overexpression of SHPRH in a normal lung epithelial cell line (HPL1D SHPRH-WT ) further supports this observation upon assessment of colony growth (Supplementary Fig. 5), suggesting that the subset of LUADs that evolve to select for SHPRH inactivation are dependent on its suppression for sustained survival.
Next, we assessed whether re-expression of SHPRH in NCI-H1395 SHPRH-DEL and NCI-H2009 SHPRH-E41* cells subcutaneously implanted into the flanks of immunocompromised mice kept on a dox diet would affect their ability to form tumors, in vivo.Indeed, TetO SHPRH cells show a significant reduction in tumor growth (Fig. 5a) and size (Fig. 5b, c) in mice kept on a dox diet, whereas TetO SHPRH cells implanted into mice kept on a normal diet do not show a significant difference in comparison to the GFP control.
Lastly, we aimed to confirm that inactivation of SHPRH can have a tumor promoting effect by knocking out SHPRH with CRISPR in a LUAD cell line with wildtype status (A549) (Supplementary Fig. 8A, B) and performing the same in vivo experiments as described previously.This demonstrated that cells with SHPRH knockout had increased growth (Supplementary Fig. 8C) and tumor size (Supplementary Fig. 8D, E) at endpoint compared to their SHPRH expressing counterparts, further supporting the role of SHPRH in tumor suppression.SHPRH inactivation was confirmed in the tumors collected at endpoint (Supplementary Fig. 8F).Together, this data phenotypically characterizes SHPRH as a tumor suppressor that acts to reduce tumorigenesis in LUAD cells with inactivating alterations of SHPRH.

Re-expression of SHPRH in lung adenocarcinoma cells with inactivating alterations increases cellular fitness in response to DNA damage
To investigate the mechanism by which SHPRH may operate as tumor suppressor in LUAD, we next set out to perform RNAseq on the NCI-H1395 SHPRH-DEL cells which do not basally express SHPRH.In effort to identify early events which may be driving the tumor suppressive phenotype that is observed in these cells upon re-expression of SHPRH, RNA was collected from TetO GFP and TetO SHPRH cells treated with or without dox for 72 h and then profiled.Differential gene expression analyses (see methods) were performed to compare the dox and no dox conditions for each cell line and GSEA [50,51] was performed to identify Hallmark [52] gene sets enriched after the addition of dox (Fig. 6a).This analysis revealed that "DNA REPAIR" was the only gene set that was significantly positively enriched in the TetO SHPRH vs TetO GFP cells after the addition of dox (Fig. 6b).
To confirm the clinical relevance of these findings, we next performed GSEA on LUAD patient tumor mRNA expression data (N = 510) [49] in order to identify the top gene sets that are negatively correlated with SHPRH expression (Fig. 6c), in concordance with SHPRH's proposed function as a tumor suppressor gene.Among the most negatively enriched Hallmark gene sets was "DNA REPAIR" (Fig. 6d), further suggesting a reduction in this gene expression signature may be contributing to LUAD tumorigenesis when SHPRH is inactivated.Interestingly, this coincides with SHPRH's GO annotated functions in DNA repair and cellular response to DNA damage stimulus (Fig. 1c) and its functionally characterized involvement in a mechanism of DNA damage tolerance (DDT) called template switching within literature.Because of this well-established role in DDT, we were interested to determine what specific processes within the DNA REPAIR gene set were affected in tumors with low SHPRH expression.We performed KEGG pathway analysis [72,73] to identify the primary biological actions of the leading edge subset of genes from the DNA REPAIR gene set.This analysis revealed that the top enriched pathways are RNA polymerase, basal transcription factors, nucleotide excision repair (NER), mismatch repair (MMR), and DNA replication (Fig. 6e).Interestingly, SHPRH is known to interact with DNA replication components, transcription factors and RNA polymerase, and along with its paralog HLTF, has recently been demonstrated to have roles in various DNA repair pathways in addition to template switching including MMR and NER, further supporting these findings [74][75][76][77][78].
Based on the above findings, we were interested in exploring whether SHPRH expression affects the tolerance of LUAD cells to DNA damaging lesions.To investigate this in vitro, we re-expressed SHPRH in NCI-H1395 SHPRH-DEL and treated the cells with different concentrations of methyl methanesulfonate (MMS), an alkylating agent and carcinogen that methylates the guanine and adenine nucleotides in DNA [79].MMS was used as a DNA damaging agent in our studies because SHPRH expression has previously been characterized to affect cellular fitness in response to MMS-induced lesions in other cell-based models [80][81][82].Therefore, we wanted to see whether similar observations would be had in the context of LUAD.Furthermore, this was assessed in NCI-H1395 SHPRH-DEL because it was observed that SHPRH re-expression alone does not affect anchorage-dependent colony formation (Fig. 4b) and therefore provides a more accurate comparison of cell survival in the presence of a genotoxic agent such as MMS.
Using clonogenic survival assays to assess for alterations in cell survival, we observed that re-expression of SHPRH in NCI-H1395 SHPRH-DEL cells reduces their sensitivity to MMS compared to control conditions (Fig. 6f).In addition, assessment of these cells upon MMS treatment using the neutral comet assay revealed that they have a reduction in their overall tail moment compared to GFPexpressing cells (Fig. 6g), suggesting that the SHPRH-expressing cells have a reduced amount of double stranded breaks.
Lastly, to determine whether evidence of increased DNA damage is associated with SHPRH inactivation in LUAD patients we separated tumors based on SHPRH inactivation status (mutation or deletion vs wildtype) and compared the degree of Tumor Mutational Burden (TMB), Mutational Count, and Fraction Genome Altered using sequence and clinical data from the LUAD TCGA PanCancer dataset [49].This revealed that LUADs with SHPRH inactivation had significantly more TMB, Mutational Count and Fraction Genome Altered, consistent with a role of this gene in mediating processes related to DNA repair (Fig. 6h).Additionally, two-hit alterations of SHPRH had significantly more TMB and Mutational Count compared to one-hit alterations (Supplementary Fig. 9).Taken together, these experimental and clinical findings suggest that SHPRH expression may have a role in the tolerance of DNA damage during LUAD tumorigenesis.

SHPRH inactivation increases sensitivity to therapeutic agents
Finally, SHPRH status may also serve to highlight targetable vulnerabilities and predict response to therapeutic agents in LUAD.
Fig. 4 Re-expression of SHPRH specifically reduces colony formation, in vitro, in cells with inactivating alteration of SHPRH.a Induction of SHPRH in NCI-H1395 SHPRH-DEL (SHPRH homozygous deletion), NCI-H2009 SHPRH-E41* (SHPRH nonsense mutation), and PC9 SHPRH-WT (SHPRH wildtype) cell lines.GFP or SHPRH was induced by the addition of 100 ng/mL of dox and protein levels were measured by Western blot.b Above: Representative images of clonogenic plates showing differences in anchorage-dependent colony growth in TetO GFP and SHPRH cells with or without the addition of 100 ng/mL dox.Below: Quantification of crystal violet staining, calculated relative to GFP no dox condition.Mean ± SEM of N = 4 independent replicates is shown.Results from Student's t test are indicated, where *p ≤ 0.05.c Above: Representative images of soft agar plates showing differences in anchorage-independent colony formation in TetO GFP and SHPRH cells with or without the addition of 100 ng/mL dox.Below: Quantification of colonies.Mean ± SEM of N = 4 independent replicates is shown.Results from Student's t test are indicated, where **p ≤ 0.01, and ***p ≤ 0.001.
Given its proposed role in mediating DNA damage response, SHPRH expression may affect tolerance to various types of DNA lesions targeted by numerous chemotherapeutic and inhibitors currently employed in the clinic.Indeed, there is reported evidence to suggest that SHPRH expression may predict response to various therapeutic agents across several cell types [83][84][85].Therefore, to assess whether SHPRH expression can help mediate the tolerance of LUAD cells to DNA damaging chemotherapeutics (etoposide and cisplatin) and PARP inhibitors (olaparib), we performed clonogenic survival assays on NCI-H1395 SHPRH-DEL , NCI-H2009 SHPRH-E41 and PC9 SHPRH-WT TetO GFP and TetO SHPRH cells (Fig. 7).Etoposide and cisplatin are presently used as first line adjuvant or neoadjuvant therapies to treat NSCLC, while olaparib is currently not approved for use in lung cancer but has been explored as a possible therapeutic for chemo-sensitive NSCLC tumor control in clinical trials [86].Interestingly, SHPRH re-expression appears to significantly confer a protective effect in response to etoposide treatment across multiple concentrations in cell lines with inactive SHPRH (H1395 and H2009) (Fig. 7a), with a moderate effect seen upon cisplatin and olaparib treatment (Fig. 7b, c).In contrast, overexpression of SHPRH in SHPRH wildtype PC9 cells demonstrated no difference at effective concentration for these agents.Together, this suggests that the absence of functional SHPRH in LUAD may provide a vulnerability to clinical therapeutics that target DNA damage response.

DISCUSSION
The discovery and identification of cancer-associated genes has been transformative for our understanding of LUAD.In recent decades, the improvement and diversification of sequencing platforms has allowed for a greater emphasis to be placed on characterizing the genomic landscape of lung cancer to direct molecular testing, identify therapeutic targets, and inform cancer care via the development of personalized therapies for patients [87].However, while our understanding and targeting of the specific oncogenic alterations driving lung cancer has progressed significantly, considerably less is known about the tumor suppressive landscape of LUAD outside of the limited number of well-characterized tumor suppressors such as RB, TP53, P16, and LKB1.By focusing on integrative genomic analyses using WES of 15 NS LUAD tumors supplemented with custom capture and copy number analyses of an expanded cohort of 68 in-house LUAD tumors and validated with external LUAD datasets, we were able to identify several novel tumor suppressor candidates in LUAD with minimal confounding from passenger gene alterations that can be caused by smoking.
While the mutations of a gene such as SHPRH appear functionally relevant for tumorigenesis, the absence of hotspot mutations in individual cancer types and overall size of this gene could prevent it from reaching statistical relevance in commonly used computational pipelines that assess mutational significance [88], some of which were built on specific observations that may not be transferable to all cancer types or study conditions [89].Thus, while these algorithms are helpful for identification of cancer drivers, they may have a degree of false negatives, underscoring the relevance of using various approaches for discovery of cancer associated genes.The workflow described here uses a unique filtering method, which identifies candidates based on mutations that are predicted to have a significant functional impact.Indeed, genes that have been well-documented in other cancers yet have not been given much clinical interest in lung cancer are demonstrated in our data.This may be due to the low penetrance of these mutations and relatively small number of LUADs from NSs subjected to DNA sequencing to date.Further evaluation may continue to lead to better understanding of lung cancer biology and the application of novel treatment strategies that are being assessed in other cancer types for a subset of patients with relevant alterations in these genes.
Because of the predicted functional impact in our tumor population, the frequency of double allelic disruptions in the expanded datasets, and its chromosomal location in a major lung cancer susceptibility region [9], we propose that SHPRH is a candidate tumor suppressor gene in LUAD.Across several cancer types, there has been an observed loss of heterozygosity of chromosome 6q24 [90], further suggesting that SHPRHlocated at 6q24.3may have a tumor suppressive role in cancer.In ovarian cancer, germline mutation of SHPRH is associated with a moderate-to-high risk of developing ovarian cancer [91], while in colon cancer, SHPRH has been shown to inhibit Wnt signaling [92].This suggests that its inactivation may also be involved in tumor initiation or progression.Furthermore, recent studies of a novel protein encoded by a circular RNA form of SHPRH (circ-SHPRH) has identified it as having a tumor suppressive function in glioblastoma [93].However, while it was suggested that this protein operated by protecting the full-length SHPRH protein from degradation, no further investigation was done on the function of full-length SHPRH itself in glioblastoma [93].Similarly, while there has been a recent emergence of evidence suggesting that circ-SHPRH operates as a tumor suppressor gene in a multitude of other cancerswhere its downregulation in turn promotes cancer development and progression by affecting a variety of oncogenic processesthe evaluation of its effect on full-length SHPRH in these cancers has yet to be conducted [94].As such, despite the overwhelming evidence suggesting that full-length SHPRH may be a tumor suppressor in multiple cancer types, the functional characterization of it as a tumor suppressor gene has yet to be exhibited.
In this study, we showed that low SHPRH expression is associated with poorer overall survival outcomes in LUAD patients, regardless of smoking status.Furthermore, we were able to phenotypically characterize SHPRH as a tumor suppressor gene by demonstrating that SHPRH re-expression in LUAD cell lines with inactivating alterations of SHPRH reduces their tumorigenic potential, in vitro and in vivo.Interestingly, we only observed this in cell lines with biallelic inactivation or mutation of SHPRH, while overexpression of SHPRH in cell lines with wildtype SHPRH had no impact on their tumorigenic potential, suggesting that its inactivation plays an integral role in the tumorigenicity of these cells.Furthermore, GSEA of LUAD tumors revealed an enrichment for DNA repair-associated genes that is negatively correlated with SHPRH expression and a preliminary investigation into the mechanistic effect that SHPRH expression may have on the tolerance of DNA damage suggests it may be protective against MMS-induced lesions and therapeutic agents that induce DNA damage.However, further investigation is needed to better understand the role of SHPRH in LUAD development, progression, and outcome.
Chromosome 6q is a region of frequent copy number deletion [71] and has been suggested to contain tumor suppressor genes [95][96][97].Previous studies using family-based linkage analysis have also found that a major lung cancer susceptibility locus located at chromosome 6q23-25 is frequently deleted in families with lung cancer [9].Specifically, it was noted that a lung cancer susceptibility gene(s) is co-inherited with a genetic marker in the chromosome 6q23-25 region in an estimated 67% of families, which increased with more affected relatives.Furthermore, carriers of alterations in this susceptibility region experience a significantly enhanced risk for developing lung cancer than noncarriers, which was further augmented upon the introduction of smoking [9,98].This suggests that a tumor suppressor gene or several tumor suppressor genes may be responsible for these findings and that the biological function of the susceptibility gene(s) may work alongside the carcinogenic effects of smoking to promote lung cancer development.While subsequent fine mapping studies have identified several genes as being candidate susceptibility markers in this locus, including SASH1, RGS17, and EYA4 [99-101], limited progress has been made to comprehensively characterize these genes as independent or Fig. 6 SHPRH expression is negatively correlated with DNA repair-associated genes in LUAD tumors and confers a protective effect to MMS-induced lesions, in vitro.a Schematic showing the analysis workflow of RNA-seq data collected from NCI-H1395 SHPRH-DEL TetO GFP and SHPRH cells with or without dox.b GSEA enrichment plot generated for the Hallmark DNA Repair gene set based on pathways unique to SHPRH expressing NCI-H1395 SHPRH-DEL cells.c Table outlining the top 5 negatively enriched gene sets within the MSigDB Hallmarks database that are negatively correlated with SHPRH expression in LUAD tumors (N = 510).Gene set size, enrichment score (ES), normalized enrichment score (NES), nominal p-value (NOM p-val), and false discovery rate q-value (FDR q-val) are indicated.d GSEA enrichment plot generated for the DNA Repair gene set based on SHPRH expression in LUAD tumors.e Dot plot showing KEGG pathway analysis of leading-edge genes from the DNA Repair gene set.Dot plot generated using ShinyGO [72,73].f Quantification of crystal violet staining of clonogenic plates for NCI-H1395 SHPRH-DEL TetO GFP and SHPRH cells with or without dox and treated with various concentrations of MMS (or mock-treated control).Calculated relative to the mock-treated condition.Mean ± SEM of N = 3 independent replicates are shown.Results from multiple t-tests with correction using the Holm-Sidak method are indicated, where *p ≤ 0.05 and **p ≤ 0.01.g Left: Quantification of comet tail moment from the neutral comet assay of NCI-H1395 SHPRH-DEL TetO GFP and SHPRH cells in dox upon treatment with 0.01% MMS or mock-treated for 4 h.cooperative tumor suppressor genes with a hereditary and prognostic role in lung cancer development.Because SHPRH resides within this lung cancer susceptibility region at chromosome 6q24.3and is an appealing candidate for a tumor suppressor gene with an implicated association with LUAD, further investigation into its role in lung cancer risk and development would be of interest.
SHPRH is an E3 ubiquitin ligase involved in mediating template switching, a mechanism of DNA damage tolerance to single stranded lesions.Template switching helps maintain the integrity of the genome by using homologous recombination-based machinery during replication to bypass such lesions in the replication fork, which would otherwise cause for the replication fork to stall and become prone to breakage if left unresolved [74,102].Indeed, our investigations suggest that SHPRH expression in LUAD cells may confer a protective effect against cellular toxicity and double-stranded breaks in response to MMS-induced lesions; however, further investigation of its implication for the cell's overall genomic stability and an understanding of the mechanism by which SHPRH operates in the face of DNA damage -MMS-induced and otherwiseis needed.Because of its role in DNA damage tolerance, SHPRH may work to counteract the effects of lung cancer risk factors, such as smoking, environmental factors, and intrinsic cellular DNA damage, in order to help prevent lung cancer development and progression.In support of this, we show that SHPRH inactivation is associated with increased mutations and genomic instability in LUAD, confirming a recent report demonstrating a similar association across TCGA datasets [77].In addition, investigating the cooperative effect of SHPRH inactivation with other known risk factors or genetic drivers of lung cancersuch as EGFR or KRAS mutationsmay provide further understanding of its role in LUAD biology, such that the inactivation of SHPRH may make cells more permissive to undergo malignant transformation in the presence of these cooperating partners.Finally, we show that SHPRH may also serve to be a predictor of response to therapeutic agents, whereby inactivation of SHPRH is associated with better efficacy of drug therapies that operate by inducing overwhelming amounts of DNA damage to the cancer cells, providing a potential strategy for treatment of LUAD patients.

CONCLUSIONS
In conclusion, our study has identified several novel candidate genetic drivers that have a predicted functional consequence in LUAD.One of the genes, SHPRH, was of particular interest due to its frequency of double allelic alterations and location in a lung cancer susceptibility region.Through clinical and biological investigations, we were able to characterize SHPRH as a tumor suppressor gene in LUAD whose expression is associated with a more favorable prognosis.However, further understanding of its role in LUAD tumorigenesis is required.Because of its function as an E3 ubiquitin ligase, the identification of SHPRH-interacting proteins paired with an analysis of the transcriptome in SHPRHexpressing LUAD may help guide our understanding of the influence that SHPRH expression has in mediating LUAD development and progression.Similarly, explorations into its reported role in cellular functions such as DNA repair, cellular response to DNA damage stimulus, and others identified by the GSEA results of LUAD cell lines and tumors may yield a greater appreciation of SHPRH's role in response to extrinsic and intrinsic factors affecting LUAD tumorigenesis.In doing so, SHPRH may become an important genetic marker to identify at-risk individuals for lung cancer and to highlight a targetable vulnerability in these patients.

Fig. 1
Fig.1Functional analysis and filtering identifies candidate genes altered in NS LUAD. a Workflow used to predict variants in genes undergoing positive selection in LUAD.b A summary table illustrating the presence of genetic mutations in the 21 genes passing functional and prevalence filtering across the 15 tumors.The top bar illustrates total somatic mutations across the cohort with retained functional mutations shown in green.c GO enrichments present in 3 or more samples that have members in novel candidate genes.Black boxes illustrate the gene being annotated with GO.

Fig. 2
Fig.2Genomic alterations and prevalence of candidate driver genes across expanded panel of LUAD tumors and assessment of two-hit frequency.a Oncoprint represents integration of genetic mutation and copy number status of the 12 identified candidates (bottom) and 10 known drivers (top) across 83 LUAD tumors.Samples with no alterations in the 21 genes are not shown.Frequency of disruption across the dataset is shown in the right panel and patient demographics are illustrated on the bottom.b Frequency of two-allele disruption in candidates in BCCA and TCGA cohorts, including homozygous mutations, deep deletions, and patients with a heterozygous mutation and loss.TP53 is shown as a control.

Fig. 3
Fig. 3 Low SHPRH expression is associated with copy number loss and poorer survival outcomes.a Box plot showing the association between SHPRH mRNA expression and copy number alteration (loss or no loss) in LUAD tumors (n = 230).Results from Student's t test are shown, where ***p ≤ 0.001.b Scatter plot showing the association between SHPRH mRNA expression and copy number in LUAD cell lines (n = 74).Pearson correlation coefficient and p-value are shown.c Box plot showing the level of SHPRH expression in LUAD tumors (N = 58) compared with normal lung epithelium (N = 67).Results from a two-tailed Mann-Whitney U test are shown, where ****p ≤ 0.0001.d KM Plots showing overall survival (OS) and progression-free survival (PFS) outcomes in LUAD patients (n = 672 for OS, n = 528 for PFS) and NS (n = 140) LUAD patients.Patients are median split into SHPRH low (black) or high (red) expression.Logrank P-values and Hazard Ratios (HR) from the cox univariate regression model are shown.Data was obtained on 14-Mar-2024.

Fig. 5
Fig. 5 Re-expression of SHPRH reduces tumor formation, in vivo.a Tumor volume and b weight measurements of NCI-H1395 SHPRH-DEL and NCI-H2009 SHPRH-E41* TetO GFP and SHPRH cells subcutaneously injected in alternating flanks of NRG mice.Mice were kept on either a normal or dox diet.For normal diet, N = 6 mice for NCI-H1395 and N = 7 mice for NCI-H2009.For dox diet, N = 10 mice for NCI-H1395 and N = 11 mice for NCI-H2009.Mean ± SEM are shown.Results from Student's paired t test are indicated, where *p ≤ 0.05 and **p ≤ 0.01.c Representative images of NCI-H1395 SHPRH-DEL and NCI-H2009 SHPRH-E41* TetO GFP and SHPRH tumors harvested from mice on a dox diet to demonstrate the smaller size of SHPRH-expressing tumors.See Supplementary Figs. 6 and 7 for images of all tumors and Western blot validation of SHPRH and GFP expression.
Fig.6SHPRH expression is negatively correlated with DNA repair-associated genes in LUAD tumors and confers a protective effect to MMS-induced lesions, in vitro.a Schematic showing the analysis workflow of RNA-seq data collected from NCI-H1395 SHPRH-DEL TetO GFP and SHPRH cells with or without dox.b GSEA enrichment plot generated for the Hallmark DNA Repair gene set based on pathways unique to SHPRH expressing NCI-H1395 SHPRH-DEL cells.c Table outlining the top 5 negatively enriched gene sets within the MSigDB Hallmarks database that are negatively correlated with SHPRH expression in LUAD tumors (N = 510).Gene set size, enrichment score (ES), normalized enrichment score (NES), nominal p-value (NOM p-val), and false discovery rate q-value (FDR q-val) are indicated.d GSEA enrichment plot generated for the DNA Repair gene set based on SHPRH expression in LUAD tumors.e Dot plot showing KEGG pathway analysis of leading-edge genes from the DNA Repair gene set.Dot plot generated using ShinyGO[72,73].f Quantification of crystal violet staining of clonogenic plates for NCI-H1395 SHPRH-DEL TetO GFP and SHPRH cells with or without dox and treated with various concentrations of MMS (or mock-treated control).Calculated relative to the mock-treated condition.Mean ± SEM of N = 3 independent replicates are shown.Results from multiple t-tests with correction using the Holm-Sidak method are indicated, where *p ≤ 0.05 and **p ≤ 0.01.g Left: Quantification of comet tail moment from the neutral comet assay of NCI-H1395 SHPRH-DEL TetO GFP and SHPRH cells in dox upon treatment with 0.01% MMS or mock-treated for 4 h.Mean ± SEM of N = 3 independent replicates are shown, with 70 events counted per replica.Results from ANOVA are indicated, where **p ≤ 0.01.Right: Representative images of the resulting comets.h Violin plots outlining the Tumor Mutation Burden (Left), Mutation Count (Center), and Fraction of Genome Altered (Right) in LUAD cases within the TCGA cohort with wildtype or inactivated (mutated or lost) SHRPH.Results from one-tailed Mann-Whitney U tests are shown, where *p ≤ 0.05 and ** p ≤ 0.01.

Fig. 7
Fig. 7 SHPRH expression affects colony formation in response to certain chemotherapeutics and targeted therapies, in vitro.Quantification of crystal violet staining of clonogenic plates for NCI-H1395 SHPRH-DEL , NCI-H2009 SHPRH-E41* , and PC9 SHPRH-WT TetO GFP and SHPRH cells with or without dox and treated with various concentrations of (a) etoposide (or DMSO control), (b) cisplatin (or saline control), and (c) olaparib (or DMSO control).Absorbance are calculated relative to the saline or DMSO control conditions.Mean ± SEM of N = 3 independent replicates are shown.Results from multiple t-tests without correction are indicated, where *p < 0.05, **p ≤ 0.01, and ***p ≤ 0.001.