Tumors that overexpress the MYC oncogene are frequently aneuploid, a state associated with highly aggressive cancers and tumor evolution. However, how MYC causes aneuploidy is not well understood. Here, we show that MYC overexpression induces mitotic spindle assembly defects and chromosomal instability (CIN) through effects on microtubule nucleation and organization. Attenuating MYC expression reverses mitotic defects, even in established tumor cell lines, indicating an ongoing role for MYC in CIN. MYC reprograms mitotic gene expression, and we identify TPX2 to be permissive for spindle assembly in MYC-high cells. TPX2 depletion blocks mitotic progression, induces cell death, and prevents tumor growth. Further elevating TPX2 expression reduces mitotic defects in MYC-high cells. MYC and TPX2 expression may be useful biomarkers to stratify patients for anti-mitotic therapies. Our studies implicate MYC as a regulator of mitosis and suggest that blocking MYC activity can attenuate the emergence of CIN and tumor evolution.
MYC Dysregulates Mitosis, Revealing Cancer Vulnerabilities.
Julia Rohrberg,Daniel Van de Mark,Meelad Amouzgar,Joyce V. Lee,Moufida Taileb,Alexandra Corella,S. Kilinc,Jeremy Williams,Marie-Lena Jokisch,Roman Camarda,S. Balakrishnan,Rama Shankar,A. Zhou,Aaron N. Chang,Bin Chen,H. Rugo,S. Dumont,A. Goga
Published 2020 in Cell Reports
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- Publication year
2020
- Venue
Cell Reports
- Publication date
2020-03-10
- Fields of study
Biology, Medicine
- Identifiers
- External record
- Source metadata
Semantic Scholar, PubMed
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