VC-resist glioblastoma cell state: vessel co-option as a key driver of chemoradiation resistance.

Cathy Pichol-Thievend, Oceane Anezo,Aafrin M Pettiwala,Guillaume Bourmeau,Remi Montagne,Anne-Marie Lyne,Pierre-Olivier Guichet, Pauline Deshors,Alberto Ballestín, Benjamin Blanchard, Juliette Reveilles,Vidhya M Ravi,Kevin Joseph, Dieter H Heiland,Boris Julien,Sophie Leboucher, Laetitia Besse, Patricia Legoix, Florent Dingli, Stephane Liva, Damarys Loew, Elisa Giani, Valentino Ribecco, Charita Furumaya, Laura Marcos-Kovandzic,Konstantin Masliantsev, Thomas Daubon, Lin Wang,Aaron A Diaz,Oliver Schnell,Jürgen Beck,Nicolas Servant,Lucie Karayan-Tapon,Florence M G Cavalli,Giorgio Seano

Nature communications(2024)

引用 0|浏览3
暂无评分
摘要
Glioblastoma (GBM) is a highly lethal type of cancer. GBM recurrence following chemoradiation is typically attributed to the regrowth of invasive and resistant cells. Therefore, there is a pressing need to gain a deeper understanding of the mechanisms underlying GBM resistance to chemoradiation and its ability to infiltrate. Using a combination of transcriptomic, proteomic, and phosphoproteomic analyses, longitudinal imaging, organotypic cultures, functional assays, animal studies, and clinical data analyses, we demonstrate that chemoradiation and brain vasculature induce cell transition to a functional state named VC-Resist (vessel co-opting and resistant cell state). This cell state is midway along the transcriptomic axis between proneural and mesenchymal GBM cells and is closer to the AC/MES1-like state. VC-Resist GBM cells are highly vessel co-opting, allowing significant infiltration into the surrounding brain tissue and homing to the perivascular niche, which in turn induces even more VC-Resist transition. The molecular and functional characteristics of this FGFR1-YAP1-dependent GBM cell state, including resistance to DNA damage, enrichment in the G2M phase, and induction of senescence/stemness pathways, contribute to its enhanced resistance to chemoradiation. These findings demonstrate how vessel co-option, perivascular niche, and GBM cell plasticity jointly drive resistance to therapy during GBM recurrence.
更多
查看译文
AI 理解论文
溯源树
样例
生成溯源树,研究论文发展脉络
Chat Paper
正在生成论文摘要