Abstract
Supernumerary centrosomes are a hallmark of cancer. To maintain viability, cancer cells cluster these centrosomes during mitosis, enabling bipolar division similar to that of normal cells. Disruption of this centrosome clustering leads to multipolar anaphase and apoptosis (anaphase catastrophe), which selectively eliminates cancer cells harboring supernumerary centrosomes. In this context, because the motor protein KIFC1 contributes to centrosome clustering, we investigated whether targeting of this mechanism through KIFC1 inhibition could be exploited in small-cell lung cancer (SCLC), an aggressive malignancy with limited treatment options and poor prognosis. Through in silico and in vitro analyses, as well as IHC of clinical samples, we found that KIFC1 is overexpressed and that centrosome amplification occurs more frequently in SCLC compared with normal tissues and other cancer types. Pharmacological and genetic inhibition of KIFC1 disrupted the clustering of supernumerary centrosomes, triggered multipolar mitosis, and exerted antineoplastic effects in SCLC cells, with minimal effects on noncancerous cells. These findings were validated and extended in vivo using SCLC xenograft models. Finally, cotargeting KIFC1 and the centrosome duplication regulator PLK4 further enhanced growth suppression in SCLC cells. Together, these results suggest that disrupting centrosome clustering and triggering anaphase catastrophe via KIFC1 inhibition may represent a promising therapeutic strategy for SCLC.