4.7 Article

The AURKA/TPX2 axis drives colon tumorigenesis cooperatively with MYC

Journal

ANNALS OF ONCOLOGY
Volume 26, Issue 5, Pages 935-942

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/annonc/mdv034

Keywords

MYC; AURKA; TPX2; synthetic lethality; co-amplification

Categories

Funding

  1. CREST, Japan Science and Technology Agency (JST)
  2. Funding Program for Next Generation World-Leading Researchers [LS094]
  3. Japan Society for the Promotion of Science (JSPS) [25861199]
  4. MEXT 'Systems Cancer Research' [4201]
  5. MEXT Strategic Programs on Innovative Research 'Supercomputational Life Science'
  6. Osaka Cancer Society
  7. Grants-in-Aid for Scientific Research [26670608, 26640081, 25861199, 26114005] Funding Source: KAKEN

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Background: The MYC oncogene has long been established as a central driver in many types of human cancers including colorectal cancer. However, the realization of MYC-targeting therapies remains elusive; as a result, synthetic lethal therapeutic approaches are alternatively being explored. A synthetic lethal therapeutic approach aims to kill MYC-driven tumors by targeting a certain co-regulator on the MYC pathway. Patients and methods: We analyzed copy number and expression profiles from 130 colorectal cancer tumors together with publicly available datasets to identify co-regulators on the MYC pathway. Candidates were functionally tested by in vitro assays using colorectal cancer and normal fibroblast cell lines. Additionally, survival analyses were carried out on another 159 colorectal cancer patients and public datasets. Results: Our in silico screening identified two MYC co-regulator candidates, AURKA and TPX2, which are interacting mitotic regulators located on chromosome 20q. We found the two candidates showed frequent co-amplification with the MYC locus while expression levels of MYC and the two genes were positively correlated with those of MYC downstream target genes across multiple cancer types. In vitro, the aberrant expression of MYC, AURKA and TPX2 resulted in more aggressive anchorage-independent growth in normal fibroblast cells. Furthermore, knockdown of AURKA or TPX2, or treatment with an AURKA-specific inhibitor effectively suppressed the proliferation of MYC-expressing colorectal cancer cells. Additionally, combined high expression of MYC, AURKA and TPX2 proved to be a poor prognostic indicator of colorectal cancer patient survival. Conclusions: Through bioinformatic analyses and experiments, we proposed TPX2 and AURKA as novel co-regulators on the MYC pathway. Inhibiting the AURKA/TPX2 axis would be a novel synthetic lethal therapeutic approach for MYC-driven cancers.

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