Aurora A is differentially expressed in gliomas, is associated with patient survival in glioblastoma, and is a potential chemotherapeutic target in gliomas

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Abstract

Aurora A is critical for mitosis and is overexpressed in several neoplasms. Its overexpression transforms cultured cells, and both its overexpression and knockdown cause genomic instability. In transgenic mice, Aurora A haploinsufficiency, not overexpression, leads to increased malignant tumor formation. Aurora A thus appears to have both tumor-promoting and tumor-suppressor functions. Here, we report that Aurora A protein, measured by quantitative western blotting, is differentially expressed in major glioma types in lineage-specific patterns. Aurora A protein levels in WHO grade II oligodendrogliomas (n = 16) and grade III anaplastic oligodendrogliomas (n = 16) are generally low, similar to control epilepsy cerebral tissue (n = 11). In contrast, pilocytic astrocytomas (n = 6) and ependymomas (n = 12) express high Aurora A levels. Among grade II to grade III astrocytomas (n = 7, n = 14, respectively) and grade IV glioblastomas (n = 31), Aurora A protein increases with increasing tumor grade. We also found that Aurora A expression is induced by hypoxia in cultured glioblastoma cells and is overexpressed in hypoxic regions of glioblastoma tumors. Retrospective Kaplan-Meier analysis revealed that both lower Aurora A protein measured by quantitative western blot (n = 31) and Aurora A mRNA levels measured by real-time quantitative RT-PCR (n = 58) are significantly associated with poorer patient survival in glioblastoma. Furthermore, we report that the selective Aurora A inhibitor MLN8237 is potently cytotoxic to glioblastoma cells, and that MLN8237 cytotoxicty is potentiated by ionizing radiation. MLN8237 also appeared to induce senescence and differentiation of glioblastoma cells. Thus, in addition to being significantly associated with survival in glioblastoma, Aurora A is a potential new drug target for the treatment of glioblastoma and possibly other glial neoplasms. © 2012 Landes Bioscience.

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Lehman, N. L., O’Donnell, J. P., Whiteley, L. J., Stapp, R. T., Lehman, T. D., Roszka, K. M., … Poisson, L. M. (2012). Aurora A is differentially expressed in gliomas, is associated with patient survival in glioblastoma, and is a potential chemotherapeutic target in gliomas. Cell Cycle, 11(3), 489–502. https://doi.org/10.4161/cc.11.3.18996

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