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Altering microtubule dynamics is synergistically toxic with spindle assembly checkpoint inhibition.

Klaske M SchukkenYu-Chih LinPetra L BakkerMichael SchubertStephanie F PreußJudith E SimonHilda van den BosZuzana StorchováMaria Colomé-TatchéHolger BastiansDiana Carolina Johanna SpieringsFloris Foijer
Published in: Life science alliance (2020)
Chromosomal instability (CIN) and aneuploidy are hallmarks of cancer. As most cancers are aneuploid, targeting aneuploidy or CIN may be an effective way to target a broad spectrum of cancers. Here, we perform two small molecule compound screens to identify drugs that selectively target cells that are aneuploid or exhibit a CIN phenotype. We find that aneuploid cells are much more sensitive to the energy metabolism regulating drug ZLN005 than their euploid counterparts. Furthermore, cells with an ongoing CIN phenotype, induced by spindle assembly checkpoint (SAC) alleviation, are significantly more sensitive to the Src kinase inhibitor SKI606. We show that inhibiting Src kinase increases microtubule polymerization rates and, more generally, that deregulating microtubule polymerization rates is particularly toxic to cells with a defective SAC. Our findings, therefore, suggest that tumors with a dysfunctional SAC are particularly sensitive to microtubule poisons and, vice versa, that compounds alleviating the SAC provide a powerful means to treat tumors with deregulated microtubule dynamics.
Keyphrases
  • induced apoptosis
  • cell cycle arrest
  • small molecule
  • signaling pathway
  • dna damage
  • tyrosine kinase
  • emergency department
  • cell death
  • gene expression
  • pi k akt
  • copy number
  • drug delivery
  • single cell
  • papillary thyroid