| Literature DB >> 33397932 |
Guangjian Fan1, Lianhui Sun1, Ling Meng2, Chen Hu1, Xing Wang1, Zhan Shi1, Congli Hu1, Yang Han1, Qingqing Yang1, Liu Cao3, Xiaohong Zhang4, Yan Zhang5, Xianmin Song5, Shujie Xia6, Baokun He7, Shengping Zhang8, Chuangui Wang9.
Abstract
Drug resistance and tumor recurrence are major challenges in cancer treatment. Cancer cells often display centrosome amplification. To maintain survival, cancer cells achieve bipolar division by clustering supernumerary centrosomes. Targeting centrosome clustering is therefore considered a promising therapeutic strategy. However, the regulatory mechanisms of centrosome clustering remain unclear. Here we report that KIFC1, a centrosome clustering regulator, is positively associated with tumor recurrence. Under DNA damaging treatments, the ATM and ATR kinases phosphorylate KIFC1 at Ser26 to selectively maintain the survival of cancer cells with amplified centrosomes via centrosome clustering, leading to drug resistance and tumor recurrence. Inhibition of KIFC1 phosphorylation represses centrosome clustering and tumor recurrence. This study identified KIFC1 as a prognostic tumor recurrence marker, and revealed that tumors can acquire therapeutic resistance and recurrence via triggering centrosome clustering under DNA damage stresses, suggesting that blocking KIFC1 phosphorylation may open a new vista for cancer therapy.Entities:
Year: 2021 PMID: 33397932 DOI: 10.1038/s41467-020-20208-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Commun ISSN: 2041-1723 Impact factor: 14.919