Aurora kinase A is a synthetic lethal target in FANCA-deficient cancers
Akhoundova, D.; Gonzalez-Fernandez, M.; Baral, A.; Benjak, A.; Perry, C.; Hardy Lubis, D. S.; Hörtensteiner, L.; Hussung, S.; Lingg, L.; Maletti, S.; Paasinen-Sohns, A.; Lehner, M.; Dislich, B.; Vassella, E.; de Brot, S.; Waldburger, T.; Tsiridis, P.; Cardozo, C.; Fritsch, R.; Pistoni, C.; Diop, S.; Thienger, P.; Kaiponen, T.; Jaquet, M.; Ricca, M.; Sivakumar, S.; McDermott-Roe, C.; Root, D. E.; Francica, P.; Rottenberg, S.; Rubin, M.
Show abstract
Loss-of-function genomic alterations in FANCA occur across multiple cancer types, yet no molecularly tailored therapies have successfully exploited this potential vulnerability. Using complementary unbiased approaches, including a genome-wide CRISPR/Cas9 loss-of-function screen and a high-throughput drug screen in isogenic cancer cell-based models, we identified Aurora kinase A (AURKA) as a reproducible synthetic lethal target of FANCA-deficient cancers. Inhibition of AURKA induced chromosomal instability, micronucleation, and early G2/M arrest selectively in FANCA-deficient cells, consistent with an increased reliance on mitotic checkpoint control. Mechanistically, FANCA deficiency is associated with an elevated AURKA expression at both the transcriptomic and protein levels, and with an upregulation of mitotic spindle and G2/M checkpoint gene signatures. Analysis of large-scale cancer genomics datasets, including over 650,000 clinically sequenced tumors, confirms that FANCA is the most frequently altered Fanconi anemia pathway gene across cancers, and that Fanconi anemia-defective tumors exhibit an increased tumor mutational burden and genomic instability. Collectively, our findings point to AURKA inhibition as a promising precision treatment strategy in FANCA-deficient cancers and provide a rationale to further explore this strategy in the clinic.
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