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Aurora A–Selective Inhibitor LY3295668 Leads to Dominant Mitotic Arrest, Apoptosis in Cancer Cells, and Shows Potent Preclinical Antitumor Efficacy

Authors :
Xueqian Gong
Karsten Boehnke
Carmen Baquero
Yue-Wei Qian
Gregory P. Donoho
Jason Manro
Robert T. Foreman
Carlos Marugán
Sonya C. Chapman
Yi Zeng
Phillip W Iversen
Jack A. Dempsey
Matthew Z. Dieter
David Anthony Barda
Henry James Robert
Michele Dowless
Shripad V. Bhagwat
Robert M. Campbell
Andrew Capen
Robert D. Van Horn
Amit Aggarwal
Mark S. Marshall
Darlene S. Barnard
Bharvin K. R. Patel
Louis Stancato
Huimin Bian
Li-Chun Chio
Sean Buchanan
Jian Du
Richard P. Beckmann
Christoph Reinhard
Ricardo Martinez
Gregory D. Plowman
Lei Yan
Shobha N. Bhattachar
Sarah M. Bogner
Maria Jose Lallena
Xiang S. Ye
Jennie L. Walgren
Yu-Hua Hui
Yue Webster
Emiko L. Kreklau
Raquel Torres
Yanzhu Yang
Bartley W. Halstead
Shaoyou Chu
Source :
Molecular Cancer Therapeutics. 18:2207-2219
Publication Year :
2019
Publisher :
American Association for Cancer Research (AACR), 2019.

Abstract

Although Aurora A, B, and C kinases share high sequence similarity, especially within the kinase domain, they function distinctly in cell-cycle progression. Aurora A depletion primarily leads to mitotic spindle formation defects and consequently prometaphase arrest, whereas Aurora B/C inactivation primarily induces polyploidy from cytokinesis failure. Aurora B/C inactivation phenotypes are also epistatic to those of Aurora A, such that the concomitant inactivation of Aurora A and B, or all Aurora isoforms by nonisoform–selective Aurora inhibitors, demonstrates the Aurora B/C-dominant cytokinesis failure and polyploidy phenotypes. Several Aurora inhibitors are in clinical trials for T/B-cell lymphoma, multiple myeloma, leukemia, lung, and breast cancers. Here, we describe an Aurora A–selective inhibitor, LY3295668, which potently inhibits Aurora autophosphorylation and its kinase activity in vitro and in vivo, persistently arrests cancer cells in mitosis, and induces more profound apoptosis than Aurora B or Aurora A/B dual inhibitors without Aurora B inhibition–associated cytokinesis failure and aneuploidy. LY3295668 inhibits the growth of a broad panel of cancer cell lines, including small-cell lung and breast cancer cells. It demonstrates significant efficacy in small-cell lung cancer xenograft and patient-derived tumor preclinical models as a single agent and in combination with standard-of-care agents. LY3295668, as a highly Aurora A–selective inhibitor, may represent a preferred approach to the current pan-Aurora inhibitors as a cancer therapeutic agent.

Details

ISSN :
15388514 and 15357163
Volume :
18
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Molecular Cancer Therapeutics
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....7ea271aab24607f19770d2cdca75d5d3
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1158/1535-7163.mct-18-0529