Abstract

Abstract Emerging evidence supports the notion that phenotypic plasticity contributes to disease progression and drug resistance in malignant glioma. We have recently described a rare population of ALDH1A1+ tumor cells in newly diagnosed, treatment-naive glioblastoma that can adapt to the exposure of the standard chemotherapeutic temozolomide (TMZ). Their subclonal growth leads to AKT-driven, TMZ-resistant cellular hierarchies. Accumulation of ALDH1A1+/pAKT+ cells can therefore be noted subsequent to TMZ in patient relapse tissue and in PDX models of disease. We have also shown that this series of events requires a sequential targeting approach where these subclones are allowed to enrich under TMZ and, only in a second step, are treated with AKT inhibitors. This “enrich and kill” strategy doubles the TMZ-based survival benefit in preclinical PDX models (Kebir et al., Clin Cancer Res 2023). Here, we took advantage of short-term expanded patient-derived cell cultures, which allow the study of early stages of this type of adaptive plasticity in controlled conditions. Specifically, we characterized the human lysine-specific demethylase 5B (KDM5B) as a prospective indicator for subclonal expansion in rare cells under first-time exposure to TMZ. We used genetic reporters, pharmacological interference, CHIP-seq analysis and cellular barcoding to investigate the dynamics of KDM5B expression and the related intracellular cross-signaling. We monitored patient cell samples over prolonged periods of time, and we found that KDM5Bhigh treatment-naive glioblastoma cells preferentially contribute to the dynamics of ALDH1A1 subclones and drug resistance under the influence of TMZ. These findings may lay ground for the development of biomarker-assisted clinical trials. This work is supported by DFG/GRC-CRU337/2 (proj#405344257).

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