Myeloid cells coordinately induce glioma cell-intrinsic and cell-extrinsic pathways for chemoresistance via GP130 signaling.
Cheng. Jiying J; Li. Min M; Motta. Edyta E; Barci. Deivi D; Song. Wangyang W; Zhou. Ding D; Li. Gen G; Zhu. Sihan S; Yang. Anru A; Vaillant. Brian D BD; Imhof. Axel A; Forné. Ignasi I; Spiegl-Kreinecker. Sabine S; Zhang. Nu N; Katayama. Hiroshi H; Bhat. Krishna P L KPL; Flüh. Charlotte C; Kälin. Roland E RE; Glass. Rainer R
Key Findings
- Nanomolar humanin levels increase temozolomide resistance in glioma cells via DNA‑damage response activation
- Humanin promotes formation of the blood‑tumor barrier, further protecting tumors
- Blocking GP130 signaling reduces both DNA‑damage response and barrier formation, improving chemotherapy efficacy
Practical Outcomes
- For biohackers, the takeaway is that taking humanin supplements might be unsafe if you have or are at risk for brain tumors, as it could blunt chemotherapy effectiveness. There’s no actionable protocol to use humanin for health benefits in this context, and it may be best to avoid it during cancer treatment.
Summary
The study found that a tiny amount of the peptide humanin can make brain tumor cells more resistant to the chemotherapy drug temozolomide by activating DNA‑damage repair pathways and strengthening the tumor’s blood barrier. Blocking the GP130 receptor that humanin uses can reverse this resistance and improve treatment in mouse models. This suggests humanin isn’t helpful for brain‑cancer patients and could be risky if you have or are prone to such tumors.
Abstract
The DNA damage response (DDR) and the blood-tumor barrier (BTB) restrict chemotherapeutic success for primary brain tumors like glioblastomas (GBMs). Coherently, GBMs almost invariably relapse with fatal outcomes. Here, we show that the interaction of GBM and myeloid cells simultaneously induces chemoresistance on the genetic and vascular levels by activating GP130 receptor signaling, which can be addressed therapeutically. We provide data from transcriptomic and immunohistochemical screens with human brain material and pharmacological experiments with a humanized organotypic GBM model, proteomics, transcriptomics, and cell-based assays and report that nanomolar concentrations of the signaling peptide humanin promote temozolomide (TMZ) resistance through DDR activation. GBM mouse models recapitulating intratumoral humanin release show accelerated BTB formation. GP130 blockade attenuates both DDR activity and BTB formation, resulting in improved preclinical chemotherapeutic efficacy. Altogether, we describe an overarching mechanism for TMZ resistance and outline a translatable strategy with predictive markers to improve chemotherapy for GBMs.
Study Information
pubmed
2024
2024-07-24T00:00:00.000Z
10.1016/j.xcrm.2024.101658
2
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