4.8 Article

Aneuploidy renders cancer cells vulnerable to mitotic checkpoint inhibition

Journal

NATURE
Volume 590, Issue 7846, Pages 486-+

Publisher

NATURE PORTFOLIO
DOI: 10.1038/s41586-020-03114-6

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Azrieli Foundation
  2. Richard Eimert Research Fund on Solid Tumors
  3. Tel-Aviv University Cancer Biology Research Center
  4. Israel Cancer Association
  5. DoD CDMRP career development award [CA191148]
  6. Italian Association for Cancer Research (MFAG 2018) [21665]
  7. Fondazione Cariplo
  8. Rita-Levi Montalcini program from MIUR
  9. Italian Ministry of Health
  10. Susan G. Komen grant [CCR16377648]
  11. NIH [GM121491]
  12. DoD PRCRP Horizon Award [W81XWH-17-1-0371]
  13. Ricerca Finalizzata [GR-2018-12367077]

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The study shows that aneuploid cancer cells are more sensitive to genetic perturbation of SAC components and their long-term proliferation is jeopardized. Furthermore, aneuploid cells exhibit aberrant spindle geometry and dynamics, which result in mitotic defects and less-fit karyotypes over time.
Selective targeting of aneuploid cells is an attractive strategy for cancer treatment(1). However, it is unclear whether aneuploidy generates any clinically relevant vulnerabilities in cancer cells. Here we mapped the aneuploidy landscapes of about 1,000 human cancer cell lines, and analysed genetic and chemical perturbation screens(2-9) to identify cellular vulnerabilities associated with aneuploidy. We found that aneuploid cancer cells show increased sensitivity to genetic perturbation of core components of the spindle assembly checkpoint (SAC), which ensures the proper segregation of chromosomes during mitosis(10). Unexpectedly, we also found that aneuploid cancer cells were less sensitive than diploid cells to short-term exposure to multiple SAC inhibitors. Indeed, aneuploid cancer cells became increasingly sensitive to inhibition of SAC over time. Aneuploid cells exhibited aberrant spindle geometry and dynamics, and kept dividing when the SAC was inhibited, resulting in the accumulation of mitotic defects, and in unstable and less-fit karyotypes. Therefore, although aneuploid cancer cells could overcome inhibition of SAC more readily than diploid cells, their long-term proliferation was jeopardized. We identified a specific mitotic kinesin, KIF18A, whose activity was perturbed in aneuploid cancer cells. Aneuploid cancer cells were particularly vulnerable to depletion of KIF18A, and KIF18A overexpression restored their response to SAC inhibition. Our results identify a therapeutically relevant, synthetic lethal interaction between aneuploidy and the SAC.

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