Abstract
Abstract Glioblastomas (GBM) are treated with high doses of ionizing radiation (IR), yet these tumors inevitably recur, and the recurrent tumors are highly therapy resistant. An understanding of mechanisms driving GBM recurrence is critical for improving therapy. During GBM therapy, both the tumor and the normal brain tissue surrounding the tumor are treated with up to 60 Gy of IR. IR is a potent inducer of senescence, and senescent stromal cells can promote the growth of neighboring tumor cells by secreting proteases, cytokines and growth factors that create a senescence-associated secretory phenotype (SASP). We have shown previously that IR-induced senescence of astrocytes in the brain leads to the secretion of SASP factors that promote the growth and invasiveness of tumor cells in mouse models of GBM (Fletcher-Sananikone, et al, Cancer Research, 2021). Following up on this study, we irradiated a panel of GBM cell lines and found that a significant fraction of these cells senesced rapidly in a p21-dependent manner. Senescent glioma cells upregulated SASP genes in a NF-kB-dependent manner, prominently, the interleukin IL6, which is an activator of the JAK-STAT pathway. Conditioned media from senescent GBM cells activated the JAK-STAT pathway in non-senescent GBM cells and promoted tumor cell proliferation and radiation resistance. Interestingly, conditioned media from senescent GBM cells could also activate the NF-kB pathway and induce SASP in non-senescent cells. These results indicate that senescent GBM cells can activate pro-tumorigenic pathways in their non-senescent counterparts and SASP can spread from senescent to non-senescent cells. Bioinformatic analyses of the transcriptomic profiles of irradiated GBM cells and the TCGA database revealed that the inhibitor of apoptosis protein cIAP2 is a critical survival factor for senescent glioma cells. We find that targeting cIAP2 using Smac mimetics triggers apoptosis of senescent GBM cells with minimal toxicity towards normal brain cells like astrocytes. Upregulation of cIAP2 in irradiated tumor cells was also seen in multiple PDX models of GBM. Using these PDX lines, we demonstrate that adjuvant senolytic treatment can delay or even prevent recurrence in pre-clinical mouse models of GBM. In sum, our findings illustrate how senescence of both stromal and tumor cells promote GBM recurrence via different mechanisms and underscore the potential utility of adjuvant senolytic therapy for blunting GBM recurrence after radiotherapy. Citation Format: Sandeep Burma, Nozomi Tomimatsu, Luis Cristofaro, Suman Kanji, Benjamin Jordan, Bipasha Mukherjee. DNA damage-induced senescence as a driver of glioblastoma recurrence [abstract]. In: Proceedings of the AACR Special Conference in Cancer Research: DNA Damage Repair: From Basic Science to Future Clinical Application; 2024 Jan 9-11; Washington, DC. Philadelphia (PA): AACR; Cancer Res 2024;84(1 Suppl):Abstract nr PR001.
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