The MYCN/Aurora-A complex is a cyclin activating kinase for CDK12

Read the full article See related articles

Listed in

This article is not in any list yet, why not save it to one of your lists.
Log in to save this article

Abstract

Deregulated MYCN is a driver of aggressive pediatric and adult neuroendocrine tumors, but critical oncogenic processes downstream of MYCN remain poorly defined. In neuroblastoma, MYCN interacts with and activates the Aurora-A kinase. Here we show that Aurora-A is a CDK-activating kinase for CDK12 by phosphorylating T893 in the T-loop, thereby enhancing its kinase activity. Aurora-A-dependent activation of CDK12 controls phosphorylation of T4 of RNA polymerase and recruits transcription termination complexes, thereby preventing transcription-replication conflicts. Enhanced crosslinking and immunoprecipitation sequencing reveals that Aurora-A associates with splice sites on nascent RNA. RNA-bound Aurora-A is catalytically inactive. MYCN competes with RNA for binding to Aurora-A and displaces Aurora-A from RNA in cells, promoting its CDK12 kinase activity. Combining Aurora-A and CDK12 inhibition potently suppresses the growth of MYCN -amplified neuroblastoma cells and patient-derived xenografts. Our data demonstrate that an Aurora-A/CDK12-dependent transcription termination pathway is a critical and targetable dependency of MYCN-driven tumors.

Article activity feed