4.8 Article

N-cadherin upregulation mediates adaptive radioresistance in glioblastoma

Journal

JOURNAL OF CLINICAL INVESTIGATION
Volume 131, Issue 6, Pages -

Publisher

AMER SOC CLINICAL INVESTIGATION INC
DOI: 10.1172/JCI136098

Keywords

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Funding

  1. NIH [CA163722, NS096236, NS117666, CA223976, P30 CA013148]
  2. Department of Defense [CA170948]
  3. Southeastern Brain Tumor Foundation
  4. Japan Society for the Promotion of Science [26830082, 13J06657]
  5. Grants-in-Aid for Scientific Research [26830082, 13J06657] Funding Source: KAKEN

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Glioblastoma is composed of heterogeneous tumor cell populations, including glioma stem cells (GSCs) with stem cell properties. GSCs, which are less radiation sensitive, drive tumor formation and recurrence. Increase in N-cadherin expression enhances radioresistance and stemness in GSCs, while targeting N-cadherin can reverse the radiation resistance phenotype in these cells.
Glioblastoma (GBM) is composed of heterogeneous tumor cell populations, including those with stem cell properties, termed glioma stem cells (GSCs). GSCs are innately less radiation sensitive than the tumor bulk and are believed to drive GBM formation and recurrence after repeated irradiation. However, it is unclear how GSCs adapt to escape the toxicity of repeated irradiation used in clinical practice. To identify important mediators of adaptive radioresistance in GBM, we generated radioresistant human and mouse GSCs by exposing them to repeat cycles of irradiation. Surviving subpopulations acquired strong radioresistance in vivo, which was accompanied by a reduction in cell proliferation and an increase in cell-cell adhesion and N-cadherin expression. Increasing N-cadherin expression rendered parental GSCs radioresistant, reduced their proliferation, and increased their stemness and intercellular adhesive properties. Conversely, radioresistant GSCs lost their acquired phenotypes upon CRISPR/Cas9-mediated knockout of N-cadherin. Mechanistically, elevated N-cadherin expression resulted in the accumulation of ?-catenin at the cell surface, which suppressed Wnt/?-catenin proliferative signaling, reduced neural differentiation, and protected against apoptosis through Clusterin secretion. N-cadherin upregulation was induced by radiation-induced IGF1 secretion, and the radiation resistance phenotype could be reverted with picropodophyllin, a clinically applicable blood-brain-barrier permeable IGF1 receptor inhibitor, supporting clinical translation.

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