American Association for Cancer Research
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Text for Supplementary Data from Cells Lacking the RB1 Tumor Suppressor Gene Are Hyperdependent on Aurora B Kinase for Survival

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posted on 2023-04-03, 21:45 authored by Matthew G. Oser, Raquel Fonseca, Abhishek A. Chakraborty, Rachel Brough, Alexander Spektor, Rebecca B. Jennings, Abdallah Flaifel, Jesse S. Novak, Aditi Gulati, Elizabeth Buss, Scott T. Younger, Samuel K. McBrayer, Glenn S. Cowley, Dennis M. Bonal, Quang-De Nguyen, Laura Brulle-Soumare, Paula Taylor, Stefano Cairo, Colm J. Ryan, Elizabeth J. Pease, Kim Maratea, Jon Travers, David E. Root, Sabina Signoretti, David Pellman, Susan Ashton, Christopher J. Lord, Simon T. Barry, William G. Kaelin

This document contains the text for the supplementary data.

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Breast Cancer Research Foundation

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NIH

HHMI

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ARTICLE ABSTRACT

Small cell lung cancer (SCLC) accounts for 15% of lung cancers and is almost always linked to inactivating RB1 and TP53 mutations. SCLC frequently responds, albeit briefly, to chemotherapy. The canonical function of the RB1 gene product RB1 is to repress the E2F transcription factor family. RB1 also plays both E2F-dependent and E2F-independent mitotic roles. We performed a synthetic lethal CRISPR/Cas9 screen in an RB1−/− SCLC cell line that conditionally expresses RB1 to identify dependencies that are caused by RB1 loss and discovered that RB1−/− SCLC cell lines are hyperdependent on multiple proteins linked to chromosomal segregation, including Aurora B kinase. Moreover, we show that an Aurora B kinase inhibitor is efficacious in multiple preclinical SCLC models at concentrations that are well tolerated in mice. These results suggest that RB1 loss is a predictive biomarker for sensitivity to Aurora B kinase inhibitors in SCLC and perhaps other RB1−/− cancers. SCLC is rarely associated with actionable protooncogene mutations. We did a CRISPR/Cas9-based screen that showed that RB1−/− SCLC are hyperdependent on AURKB, likely because both genes control mitotic fidelity, and confirmed that Aurora B kinase inhibitors are efficacious against RB1−/− SCLC tumors in mice at nontoxic doses.See related commentary by Dick and Li, p. 169.This article is highlighted in the In This Issue feature, p. 151