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EML4-ALK variant 3 promotes mitotic errors and spindle assembly checkpoint deficiency leading to increased microtubule poison sensitivity

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posted on 2024-01-26, 10:21 authored by Kellie Lucken, Laura O’Regan, Jene Choi, Josephina Sampson, Sarah L Pashley, Richard Bayliss, Sam Khan, Andrew M. Fry

EML4-ALK is an oncogenic fusion protein present in approximately 5% of non–small cell lung cancers (NSCLC). Alternative breakpoints in the gene encoding EML4 result in distinct variants that are linked to markedly different patient outcomes. Patients with EML4-ALK variant 3 (V3) respond poorly to ALK inhibitors and have lower survival rates compared with patients with other common variants, such as V1. Here, we use isogenic Beas-2B bronchial epithelial cell lines expressing EML4-ALK V1 or V3, as well as ALK-positive NSCLC patient cells that express V1 (H3122 cells) or V3 (H2228 cells), to show that EML4-ALK V3 but not V1 leads to hyperstabilized K-fibers in mitosis, as well as errors in chromosome congression and segregation. This is consistent with our observation that EML4-ALK V3 but not V1 localizes to spindle microtubules and that wild-type EML4 is a microtubule stabilizing protein. In addition, cells expressing EML4-ALK V3 exhibit loss of spindle assembly checkpoint control that is at least in part dependent on ALK catalytic activity. Finally, we demonstrate that cells expressing EML4-ALK V3 have increased sensitivity to microtubule poisons that interfere with mitotic spindle assembly, whereas combination treatment with paclitaxel and clinically approved ALK inhibitors leads to a synergistic response in terms of reduced survival of H2228 cells.


Implications:

This study suggests that combining the microtubule poison, paclitaxel, with targeted ALK inhibitors may provide an effective new treatment option for patients with NSCLC with tumors that express the EML4-ALK V3 oncogenic fusion.

Funding

BBSRC

MRC

Wellcome Trust Institutional Strategic Support Fund Early Career Research Fellowship

Worldwide Cancer Research Award Id(s): 16-0119

Cancer Research UK Award Id(s): C24461/A23302

History

Author affiliation

Department of Molecular and Cell Biology, University of Leicester

Version

  • VoR (Version of Record)

Published in

Molecular Cancer Research

Volume

20

Issue

6

Pagination

854-866

Publisher

American Association for Cancer Research

issn

1044-9523

Copyright date

2022

Available date

2024-01-26

Language

en

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