Abstract
Multiple myeloma (MM) is a dreadful disease, marked by the uncontrolled proliferation of clonal plasma cells (PCs) within the bone marrow (BM). MM is characterized by a highly heterogeneous clinical and molecular background, supported by severe genomic alterations. Important deregulation of long non-coding RNAs (lncRNAs) expression has been reported in MM patients, influencing progression and therapy resistance. NEAT1 is a lncRNA essential for nuclear paraspeckles and involved in gene expression regulation. We showed that NEAT1 supports MM proliferation making this lncRNA an attractive therapeutic candidate. Here, we used a combinatorial strategy integrating transcriptomic and computational approaches with functional high-throughput drug screening, to identify compounds that synergize with NEAT1 inhibition in restraining MM cells growth. AUKA inhibitors were identified as top-scoring drugs in these analyses. We showed that the combination of NEAT1 silencing and AURKA inhibitors in MM profoundly impairs microtubule organization and mitotic spindle assembly, finally leading to cell death. Analysis of the large publicly CoMMpass dataset showed that in MM patients AURKA expression is strongly associated with reduced progression-free (p < 0.0001) and overall survival probability (p < 0.0001) and patients displaying high expression levels of both NEAT1 and AURKA have a worse clinical outcome. Finally, using RNA-sequencing data from NEAT1 knockdown (KD) MM cells, we identified the AURKA allosteric regulator TPX2 as a new NEAT1 target in MM and as a mediator of the interplay between AURKA and NEAT1, therefore providing a possible explanation of the synergistic activity observed upon their combinatorial inhibition.
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