Abstract

Abstract Two major obstacles in brain cancer treatment are the blood-tumor barrier (BTB), which restricts delivery of most therapeutic agents, and the quiescent brain tumor-initiating cells (BTICs), which evade cell cycle-targeting chemotherapy. Mechanosensation, the transduction of mechanical cues into cellular signaling, underlies physiological processes such as touch, pain, proprioception, hearing, respiration, epithelial homeostasis, and vascular and lymphatic development. We report that medulloblastoma (MB) BTICs are mechanosensing, a property conferred by force-activated ion channel Piezo2. In contrast to the prevailing view that astrocytes function as a physical barrier in BTB, BTICs project endfeet to ensheathe capillaries. MB develops a tissue stiffness gradient as a function of distance to capillaries. Piezo2 senses substrate stiffness to sustain local intracellular calcium, actomyosin tension, and adhesion at BTIC growth cones, which allow BTICs to mechanically interact with their substrate and sequester β-Catenin to prevent WNT/β-Catenin signaling in BTICs. Our single cell analysis uncovers a two-branched BTIC trajectory that progresses from a deep quiescent state to two cycling states. Tumor cell-specific Piezo2 knockout reverses the off-on WNT/β-Catenin signaling states in BTICs and endothelial cells, collapses the BTB, reduces quiescence depth of BTICs, and markedly enhances MB response to chemotherapy. Our study reveals that BTICs co-opt astrocytic mechanism to contribute to the BTB and provides the first evidence that BTB depends on mechanochemical signaling to mask tumor chemosensitivity. Targeting Piezo2 addresses BTB and BTIC properties that underlie therapy failures in brain cancer.

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