Emerging roles of Aurora-A kinase in cancer therapy resistance
Abstract
Aurora kinase A (Aurora-A), a serine/threonine kinase, plays a pivotal role in various cellular processes, including mitotic entry, centrosome maturation and spindle formation. Overexpression or gene-amplification/mutation of Aurora-A kinase occurs in different types of cancer, including lung cancer, colorectal cancer, and breast cancer. Alteration of Aurora-A impacts multiple cancer hallmarks, especially, immortalization, energy metabolism, immune escape and cell death resistance which are involved in cancer progression and resistance. This review highlights the most recent advances in the oncogenic roles and related multiple cancer hallmarks of Aurora-A kinase-driving cancer therapy resistance, including chemoresistance (taxanes, cisplatin, cyclophosphamide), targeted therapy resistance (osimertinib, imatinib, sorafenib, etc.), endocrine therapy resistance (tamoxifen, fulvestrant) and radioresistance. Specifically, the mechanisms of Aurora-A kinase promote acquired resistance through modulating DNA damage repair, feedback activation bypass pathways, resistance to apoptosis, necroptosis and autophagy, metastasis, and stemness. Noticeably, our review also summarizes the promising synthetic lethality strategy for Aurora-A inhibitors in RB1, ARID1A and MYC gene mutation tumors, and potential synergistic strategy for mTOR, PAK1, MDM2, MEK inhibitors or PD-L1 antibodies combined with targeting Aurora-A kinase. In addition, we discuss the design and development of the novel class of Aurora-A inhibitors in precision medicine for cancer treatment.
Acknowledgement
We want to apologize for those authors whose study we could not cite due to space constrains. The project was supported by the Natural Science Foundation of Hebei Province (No. H2020209284, China, Dayong Zheng); Scientific Research Foundation of Higher Education Institutions of Hebei Province (No. QN2021120, Dayong Zheng); Department of Science and Technology of Liaoning province (No. 2020-MS-225, China, Jun Li); the Montefiore Einstein Cancer Center grant (NCI P30CA013330, USA, Edward Chu).
Contributions
Ning Wei and Dayong Zheng conceived and designed this review. Dayong Zheng and Jun Li analyzed the literatures and summarized the results. Ning Wei and Dayong Zheng designed and regenerated the figures. Ning Wei and Edward Chu reviewed and edited this review. Han Yan, Gang Zhang and Wei Li checked the figures and formatted the tables. All of the authors have read and approved the final manuscript.
Conflict of Interest
The authors declare no conflict of interest.
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Additional details
Identifiers
- PMCID
- PMC10372834
Dates
- Accepted
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2023-03-02Accepted
- Available
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2023-03-15Available Online
- Available
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2023-07-19Version of Record