The Aurora-A kinase and its major regulator TPX2 act as key players during mitosis. Both are overexpressed in tumors, and the Aurora-A/TPX2 complex has been proposed as a potential oncogenic holoenzyme. Evidence of Aurora-A non-mitotic roles in cancer, some of which depend on its nuclear accumulation in interphase and are independent from the kinase activity, is emerging. Indeed, many Aurora-A ATP-competitive inhibitors have shown limited efficacy in clinical trials so far, highlighting the need for novel strategies to inhibit Aurora-A. Interestingly, our recent results suggest an involvement of TPX2 also in the non-mitotic protumorigenic roles of Aurora-A, which makes the Aurora-A/TPX2 complex a promising target. We previously described Aurora-A/TPX2 protein-protein interaction inhibitors. Here, starting from in silico analyses, we identified a new compound, i.e., ATC12, which we validated in vitro as a molecule able to bind Aurora-A and to compete with TPX2. We investigated the effects of ATC12 in 2D cultures and 3D mammospheres of breast cancer cell lines, as well as in patient-derived organoids, and observed an impairment of Aurora-A/TPX2 interaction and a decrease in cell viability and proliferation. Altogether, our observations support the targeting of the Aurora-A/TPX2 complex as a promising strategy for the development of novel anti-cancer therapeutics.
The ATC12 small molecule inhibits the Aurora-A/TPX2 interaction and impairs the proliferation of breast cancer cells / Boi, D., Fianco, G., Polverino, F., Fiorentino, F., Mastrangelo, A., Rossi, S., Rubini, E., Rosignoli, S., Troilo, F., Antonelli, M.R., Tarquini, D., Cervoni, L., Rinaldo, S., Tramonti, A., Scarpone, E.K., Naro, C., Sette, C., Stagni, V., Colotti, G., Rotili, D., et al.. - In: CELL DEATH & DISEASE. - ISSN 2041-4889. - 17:1(2026). [10.1038/s41419-026-08579-3]
The ATC12 small molecule inhibits the Aurora-A/TPX2 interaction and impairs the proliferation of breast cancer cells
Fiorentino, Francesco;Rossi, Simone;Rubini, Elisabetta;Rosignoli, Serena;Cervoni, Laura;Rinaldo, Serena;Paiardini, Alessandro;Guarguaglini, Giulia;
2026
Abstract
The Aurora-A kinase and its major regulator TPX2 act as key players during mitosis. Both are overexpressed in tumors, and the Aurora-A/TPX2 complex has been proposed as a potential oncogenic holoenzyme. Evidence of Aurora-A non-mitotic roles in cancer, some of which depend on its nuclear accumulation in interphase and are independent from the kinase activity, is emerging. Indeed, many Aurora-A ATP-competitive inhibitors have shown limited efficacy in clinical trials so far, highlighting the need for novel strategies to inhibit Aurora-A. Interestingly, our recent results suggest an involvement of TPX2 also in the non-mitotic protumorigenic roles of Aurora-A, which makes the Aurora-A/TPX2 complex a promising target. We previously described Aurora-A/TPX2 protein-protein interaction inhibitors. Here, starting from in silico analyses, we identified a new compound, i.e., ATC12, which we validated in vitro as a molecule able to bind Aurora-A and to compete with TPX2. We investigated the effects of ATC12 in 2D cultures and 3D mammospheres of breast cancer cell lines, as well as in patient-derived organoids, and observed an impairment of Aurora-A/TPX2 interaction and a decrease in cell viability and proliferation. Altogether, our observations support the targeting of the Aurora-A/TPX2 complex as a promising strategy for the development of novel anti-cancer therapeutics.| File | Dimensione | Formato | |
|---|---|---|---|
|
Boi_The ATC12 small_2026.pdf
accesso aperto
Tipologia:
Documento in Pre-print (manoscritto inviato all'editore, precedente alla peer review)
Licenza:
Creative commons
Dimensione
4.51 MB
Formato
Adobe PDF
|
4.51 MB | Adobe PDF |
I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.


