Abstract

Glioblastoma is the most common and malignant primary brain tumour in adults, with a dismal prognosis. This is partly due to considerable inter- and intra-tumour heterogeneity. Changes in the cellular energy-producing mitochondrial respiratory chain complex (MRC) activities are a hallmark of glioblastoma relative to the normal brain, and associate with differential survival outcomes. Targeting MRC complexes with drugs can also facilitate anti-glioblastoma activity. Whether mutations in the mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) that encode several components of the MRC contribute to these phenomena remains underexplored. We identified a germ-line mtDNA mutation (m. 14798T > C), enriched in glioblastoma relative to healthy controls, that causes an amino acid substitution F18L within the core mtDNA-encoded cytochrome b subunit of MRC complex III. F18L is predicted to alter corresponding complex III activity, and sensitivity to complex III-targeting drugs. This could in turn alter reactive oxygen species (ROS) production, cell behaviour and, consequently, patient outcomes. Here we show that, despite a heterogeneous mitochondrial background in adult glioblastoma patient biopsy-derived cell cultures, the F18L substitution associates with alterations in individual MRC complex activities, in particular a 75% increase in MRC complex II_III activity, and a 34% reduction in CoQ10, the natural substrate for MRC complex III, levels. Downstream characterisation of an F18L-carrier revealed an 87% increase in intra-cellular ROS, an altered cellular distribution of mitochondrial-specific ROS, and a 64% increased sensitivity to clomipramine, a repurposed MRC complex III-targeting drug. In patients, F18L-carriers that received the current standard of care treatment had a poorer prognosis than non-carriers (373 days vs. 415 days, respectively). Single germ-line mitochondrial mutations could predispose individuals to differential prognoses, and sensitivity to mitochondrial targeted drugs. Thus, F18L, which is present in blood could serve as a useful non-invasive biomarker for the stratification of patients into prognostically relevant groups, one of which requires a lower dose of clomipramine to achieve clinical effect, thus minimising side-effects.

Highlights

  • Glioblastoma (GBM; WHO grade IV) is the most malignant and common primary brain tumour in adults [1]

  • Of particular interest in this regard is an inherited mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) mutation, M. 14798T > C, that we have previously identified by means of generation sequencing of glioblastoma mtDNAs

  • The differences in specific mitochondrial respiratory chain complex (MRC) activities compared to normal brain controls were highly dependent on the glioblastoma cell cultures investigated

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Summary

Introduction

Glioblastoma (GBM; WHO grade IV) is the most malignant and common primary brain tumour in adults [1]. Several drugs that were shown to target and inhibit the MRC complexes IV and III over 50 years ago have promising anti-glioblastoma activity in pre-clinical models—this includes chlorpromazine an antipsychotic agent [14] and clomipramine a tricyclic antidepressant (TCA [15,16,17,18]), respectively Another TCA, imipramine, was shown to convey therapeutic benefit to tumour baring animals via increasing autophagy-associated cell death [19]. F18L, and due to its location within the MT-CYB CoQ10 (ubiquinone)/inhibitor binding site known as the Qi-site, it is predicted to cause changes in complex III activity and sensitivity to the Qi-site-targeting drug clomipramine [20] This in turn, could affect CoQ10 levels, ROS production and cellular proliferation rates, and patient prognoses. We show that F18L, through structural and functional alterations to MRC complex III, could predispose individuals to differential prognoses, and sensitivity to mitochondrial targeted drugs that may have applicability in treating glioblastoma

Results
Patient-Derived Glioblastoma Cell Cultures
Patient-Derived Glioblastoma Tissues
F18L Mutation Identification
Measurement of MRC Enzyme and Citrate Synthase Activity and CoQ10 Levels
Intracellular ROS Detection
Live Cell Imaging of Mitochondrial ROS and Networks
Immunoblotting
Analysis of Cell Proliferation with and without Clomipramine
Statistical Analysis
Full Text
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