Abstract

Simple SummaryGlioblastoma is the most common primary brain cancer in adults. One reason for the development and malignancy of this tumor is the misregulation of certain cellular proteins. The oncoprotein STAT3 that is frequently overactive in glioblastoma cells is associated with more aggressive disease and decreased patient survival. Autophagy is a form of cellular self digestion that normally maintains cell integrity and provides nutrients and basic building blocks required for growth. While glioblastoma is known to be particularly resistant to conventional therapies, recent research has suggested that these tumors are more sensitive to excessive overactivation of autophagy, leading to autophagy-dependent tumor cell death. Here, we show a hitherto unknown role of STAT3 in sensitizing glioblastoma cells to excessive autophagy induced with the repurposed drug pimozide. These findings provide the basis for future research aimed at determining whether STAT3 can serve as a predictor for autophagy-proficient tumors and further support the notion of overactivating autophagy for cancer therapy.Glioblastoma (GBM) is a devastating disease and the most common primary brain malignancy of adults with a median survival barely exceeding one year. Recent findings suggest that the antipsychotic drug pimozide triggers an autophagy-dependent, lysosomal type of cell death in GBM cells with possible implications for GBM therapy. One oncoprotein that is often overactivated in these tumors and associated with a particularly dismal prognosis is Signal Transducer and Activator of Transcription 3 (STAT3). Here, we used isogenic human and murine GBM knockout cell lines, advanced fluorescence microscopy, transcriptomic analysis and FACS-based assessment of cell viability to show that STAT3 has an underappreciated, context-dependent role in drug-induced cell death. Specifically, we demonstrate that depletion of STAT3 significantly enhances cell survival after treatment with Pimozide, suggesting that STAT3 confers a particular vulnerability to GBM. Furthermore, we show that active STAT3 has no major influence on the early steps of the autophagy pathway, but exacerbates drug-induced lysosomal membrane permeabilization (LMP) and release of cathepsins into the cytosol. Collectively, our findings support the concept of exploiting the pro-death functions of autophagy and LMP for GBM therapy and to further determine whether STAT3 can be employed as a treatment predictor for highly apoptosis-resistant, but autophagy-proficient cancers.

Highlights

  • Glioblastoma (GBM; grade IV glioma, WHO) is a primary brain tumor that mainly occurs in adults

  • To analyze the possible role of Signal Transducer and Activator of Transcription 3 (STAT3) in autophagy-dependent lysosomal cell death (ADLCD) we first tested a panel consisting of 12 human and murine GBM cell lines for their STAT3 expression level and activation state (Supplemental Figure S1A)

  • We observed that STAT3/Stat3 expression varies between the different cell models (Supplemental Figure S1B), but the highest activation (Tyr705phosphorylation; Supplemental Figure S1C) was found in the human GBM cell MZ-54 and the murine GBM cell line Tu9648

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Summary

Introduction

Glioblastoma (GBM; grade IV glioma, WHO) is a primary brain tumor that mainly occurs in adults. Different molecular subtypes of GBM have been described based on the genetic profiles of the tumors. Their nomenclature is not uniformly used, the general consensus agrees on three GBM subtypes: proneural, classical and mesenchymal [3,4], of which the latter one is the most aggressive. Signal Transducer and Activator of Transcription (STAT3) is a molecular hub-like oncoprotein that is highly overactivated in GBM and associated with the mesenchymal subtype [5,6]. The activation of STAT3 is mediated by multiple upstream kinases [9] which phosphorylate the protein at two different sites (reviewed in [10], Tyrosine705 (pY705Stat3)

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