Author
Listed:
- Róbert Zach
(University of Sussex)
- Michael Annis
(University of Sussex)
- Sandra M. Martin-Guerrero
(Queen Mary University of London)
- Abdulrahman Alatawi
(University of Sussex)
- Kim Hou Chia
(University College London Cancer Institute)
- Megan Meredith
(University of Sussex)
- Kay Osborn
(University of Sussex)
- Nisha Peter
(University of Sussex)
- William Pearce
(University of Sussex)
- Jessica Booth
(University of Sussex)
- Mohan Rajasekaran
(University of Sussex)
- Samantha Dias
(University of Sussex)
- Lily Coleman-Evans
(University of Sussex)
- William R. Foster
(University of Sussex)
- Jon A. Harper
(University of Sussex)
- Alex D. Herbert
(University of Sussex)
- Catherine Tighe
(University of Sussex)
- Tristan Reuillon
(University of Sussex)
- Ryan West
(University of Sussex)
- Oliver Busby
(University of Sussex)
- Kamila Burdova
(University of Sussex)
- Damien Crepin
(University of Sussex)
- Sergi Ortoll
(University of Sussex)
- Kulthida Vaeteewoottacharn
(Khon Kaen University)
- Donniphat Dejsuphong
(Mahidol University)
- John Spencer
(University of Sussex)
- Hitesh Patel
(Cardiff University)
- Darren Grand
(Cardiff University)
- Thomas A. Hunt
(AstraZeneca)
- David M. Andrews
(AstraZeneca)
- Hiroyuki Yamano
(University College London Cancer Institute)
- Pedro R. Cutillas
(Queen Mary University of London)
- Antony W. Oliver
(University of Sussex)
- Simon E. Ward
(Cardiff University)
- Helfrid Hochegger
(University of Sussex)
Abstract
The Greatwall kinase inhibits PP2A-B55 phosphatase activity during mitosis to stabilise critical Cdk1-driven mitotic phosphorylation. Although Greatwall represents a potential oncogene and prospective therapeutic target, our understanding of the cellular and molecular consequences of chemical Greatwall inactivation remains limited. To address this, we introduce C-604, a highly selective Greatwall inhibitor, and characterise both immediate and long-term cellular responses to the chemical attenuation of Greatwall activity. We demonstrate that Greatwall inhibition causes systemic destabilisation of the mitotic phosphoproteome, premature mitotic exit and pleiotropic cellular pathologies. Importantly, we show that the cellular and molecular abnormalities associated with reduced Greatwall activity are specifically dependent on the B55α isoform, rather than other B55 variants, underscoring PP2A-B55α phosphatases as key mediators of the cytotoxic effects of Greatwall-targeting agents in human cells. Additionally, we establish that sensitivity to Greatwall inhibition varies in different cell line models and that dependency on Greatwall activity reflects the balance between Greatwall and B55α expression levels. Our findings highlight Greatwall dependency as a cell-specific vulnerability and propose the B55α-to-Greatwall expression ratio as a predictive biomarker of cellular responses to Greatwall-targeted therapeutics.
Suggested Citation
Róbert Zach & Michael Annis & Sandra M. Martin-Guerrero & Abdulrahman Alatawi & Kim Hou Chia & Megan Meredith & Kay Osborn & Nisha Peter & William Pearce & Jessica Booth & Mohan Rajasekaran & Samantha, 2025.
"The balance between B55α and Greatwall expression levels predicts sensitivity to Greatwall inhibition in cancer cells,"
Nature Communications, Nature, vol. 16(1), pages 1-20, December.
Handle:
RePEc:nat:natcom:v:16:y:2025:i:1:d:10.1038_s41467-025-62943-z
DOI: 10.1038/s41467-025-62943-z
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