Inhibition of the Spindle Assembly Checkpoint Kinase Mps-1 as a Novel Therapeutic Strategy in Malignant Mesothelioma
Inhibition of the Spindle Assembly Checkpoint Kinase Mps-1 as a Novel Therapeutic Strategy in Malignant Mesothelioma
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Significance

CFI-402257 is a promising novel therapeutic agent to improve the efficacy of the current chemotherapeutic regimens for MM patients.

Malignant mesothelioma (MM) is an aggressive malignancy, highly resistant to current medical and surgical therapies, whose tumor cells characteristically show a high level of aneuploidy and genomic instability. We tested our hypothesis that targeting chromosomal instability in MM would improve response to therapy. Thr/Tyr kinase (TTK)/monopolar spindle 1 kinase (Mps-1) is a kinase of the spindle assembly checkpoint that controls cell division and cell fate. CFI-402257 is a novel, selective inhibitor of Mps-1 with antineoplastic activity. We found that CFI-402257 suppresses MM growth. We found that Mps-1 is overexpressed in MM and that its expression correlates with poor patients’ outcome. In vitro, CFI-402257-mediated inhibition of Mps-1 resulted in abrogation of the mitotic checkpoint, premature progression through mitosis, marked aneuploidy and mitotic catastrophe. In vivo, CFI-402257 reduced MM growth in an orthotopic, syngeneic model, when used as a single agent, and more so when used in combination with cisplatin+pemetrexed, the current standard of care. Our preclinical findings indicate that CFI-402257 is a promising novel therapeutic agent to improve the efficacy of the current chemotherapeutic regimens for MM patients.

A Szymiczek, M Carbone, S Pastorino, A Napolitano, M Tanji, M Minaai, I Pagano, J M Mason, H I Pass, M R Bray, T W Mak and H Yang

 

Oncogene Short Communication
July 31, 2017 | doi:10.1038/onc.2017.266