| Literature DB >> 29415883 |
Yanling Wang1, Haineng Xu1, Tianrun Liu1, Menggui Huang1, Param-Puneet Butter1, Chunsheng Li2, Lin Zhang2, Gary D Kao1, Yanqing Gong3, Amit Maity1, Constantinos Koumenis1, Yi Fan1,4.
Abstract
Cancer stem cells (CSCs) - known to be resistant to genotoxic radiation and chemotherapy - are fundamental to therapy failure and cancer relapse. Here, we reveal that glioma CSCs are hypersensitive to radiation, but a temporal DNA repair mechanism converts the intrinsic sensitivity to genomic instability and treatment resistance. Transcriptome analysis identifies DNA-dependent protein kinase (DNA-PK) as a predominant DNA repair enzyme in CSCs. Notably, DNA-PK activity is suppressed after irradiation when ROS induce the dissociation of DNA-PKcs with Ku70/80, resulting in delayed DNA repair and radiosensitivity; subsequently, after ROS clearance, the accumulated DNA damage and robust activation of DNA-PK induce genomic instability, facilitated by Rad50-mediated cell-cycle arrest, leading to enhanced malignancy, CSC overgrowth, and radioresistance. Finally, we show a requisite in vivo role for DNA-PK in CSC-mediated radioresistance and glioma progression. These findings identify a time-sensitive mechanism controlling CSC resistance to DNA-damaging treatments and suggest DNA-PK/Rad50 as promising targets for CSC eradication.Entities:
Keywords: Brain cancer; Cancer; DNA repair; Oncology; Stem cells
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Year: 2018 PMID: 29415883 PMCID: PMC5821187 DOI: 10.1172/jci.insight.98096
Source DB: PubMed Journal: JCI Insight ISSN: 2379-3708