Cooperative motor proteins found to kill cancer cells when dual-inhibited
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Cooperative motor proteins found to kill cancer cells when dual-inhibited


Discovery reveals how key molecules coordinate chromosome alignment and offers a new anticancer target

Osaka, Japan - A research team from The University of Osaka, in collaboration with the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, has uncovered a new molecular mechanism underlying chromosome alignment during cell division. The study demonstrates that two motor proteins, KIF18A and CENP-E, act cooperatively to ensure proper chromosome congression. Remarkably, simultaneous inhibition of these proteins selectively kills cancer cells, suggesting a promising therapeutic avenue.

Accurate chromosome segregation is essential for healthy cell division; its failure leads to chromosomal instability—a hallmark of cancer. While the kinetochore, a protein complex on chromosomes, coordinates this process, the overlapping roles of many proteins have made it difficult to clarify the exact mechanisms.

Using a genome-wide CRISPR screen in cells with a mild defect of kinetochore (the chromosomal structure where sorting machinery attaches) by a CENP-C mutation, the researchers identified KIF18A as a gene whose loss caused synthetic lethality with the CENP-C mutation. Further analyses revealed that this kinetochore defect stemmed from reduced CENP-E activity, indicating that KIF18A and CENP-E cooperate downstream of CENP-C to drive early-stage chromosome alignment. Cancer cells with naturally low CENP-E levels were found to be highly sensitive to KIF18A inhibition, and combined inhibition of both proteins effectively induced cell death.

The research team used a unique cell line with a partially defective kinetochore to screen for genetic weaknesses. They found that these cells died when the KIF18A gene was disrupted. Further investigation revealed that these cells also had reduced levels of another motor protein, CENP-E.

The study demonstrated that KIF18A and CENP-E work together to ensure chromosomes align properly at the center of a cell. In normal cells, if one protein's function is compromised, the other can often compensate. However, when both are functionally impaired, chromosome alignment fails completely, leading to cell death. Crucially, the research team found that cancer cells sensitive to KIF18A inhibitors naturally have low levels of CENP-E, explaining why the drugs are so effective in these specific cases.

The study suggests that some cancer cells become especially vulnerable when they have low levels of a protein called CENP-E. This means that measuring CENP-E could help identify cancers that respond well to drugs blocking another protein, KIF18A. The results also hint that combining drugs that affect these two proteins might make cancer treatments more effective.

“We not only uncovered detailed mechanisms of chromosome segregation but also applied these findings to efficiently kill cancer cells, emphasizing that such targeted therapies must be grounded in basic research,” says senior author Professor Tatsuo Fukagawa.
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The article, “KIF18A promotes chromosome congression in cooperation with CENP-E downstream of CENP-C,” will be published in Cell Reports at DOI: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.celrep.2025.116515
Title: KIF18A promotes chromosome congression in cooperation with CENP-E downstream of CENP-C
Journal: Cell Reports
Authors: Jiahang Miao, Masatoshi Hara, Kuan-Chung Su, Heather R. Keys, Weixia Kong, Yusuke Takenoshita, Iain M. Cheeseman and Tatsuo Fukagawa
DOI: 10.1016/j.celrep.2025.116515
Funded by:
Japan Society for the Promotion of Science
Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology
Japan Science and Technology Agency
Article publication date: 07-NOV-2025
Related links:
Fukagawa Lab, Graduate School of Frontier Biosciences, The University of Osaka
https://www.fbs.osaka-u.ac.jp/labs/fukagawa/en/index.html
Attached files
  • Fig. 1 Summary of this study. Left: Normal cells. Second from left: Cells with slightly reduced CENP-E function. These cells show slightly delayed chromosome alignment but remain viable before KIF18A knockdown. Third from left: Cells with normal function or sufficient CENP-E function. These cells do not die after KIF18A function is disrupted. Right: ells with slightly reduced CENP-E function. These cells die after KIF18A function is disrupted, because chromosome congression never happened.©Original content, Credit must be given to the creator. Only noncommercial uses of the work are permitted. No derivatives or adaptations of the work are permitted., Original content by Tatsuo Fukagawa
Regions: Asia, Japan
Keywords: Health, Medical, Science, Life Sciences

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