Publication | Open Access
Temporal DNA-PK activation drives genomic instability and therapy resistance in glioma stem cells
62
Citations
43
References
2018
Year
Cancer BiologyGliomaTumor BiologyDelayed Dna RepairGlioma Stem CellsRadiation OncologyStem CellsCancer ResearchCancer Stem CellsHealth SciencesGenome InstabilityGlioma CscsCancer GeneticsCell BiologyTumor MicroenvironmentLineage PlasticityCancer GenomicsStem Cell ResearchTumor SuppressorMedicineTherapy Resistance
Cancer stem cells (CSCs) - known to be resistant to genotoxic radiation and chemotherapy - are fundamental to therapy failure and cancer relapse. Here, we reveal that glioma CSCs are hypersensitive to radiation, but a temporal DNA repair mechanism converts the intrinsic sensitivity to genomic instability and treatment resistance. Transcriptome analysis identifies DNA-dependent protein kinase (DNA-PK) as a predominant DNA repair enzyme in CSCs. Notably, DNA-PK activity is suppressed after irradiation when ROS induce the dissociation of DNA-PKcs with Ku70/80, resulting in delayed DNA repair and radiosensitivity; subsequently, after ROS clearance, the accumulated DNA damage and robust activation of DNA-PK induce genomic instability, facilitated by Rad50-mediated cell-cycle arrest, leading to enhanced malignancy, CSC overgrowth, and radioresistance. Finally, we show a requisite in vivo role for DNA-PK in CSC-mediated radioresistance and glioma progression. These findings identify a time-sensitive mechanism controlling CSC resistance to DNA-damaging treatments and suggest DNA-PK/Rad50 as promising targets for CSC eradication.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1