Red light‐activated depletion of drug‐refractory glioblastoma stem cells and chemosensitization of an acquired‐resistant mesenchymal phenotype

Author:

Spring Bryan Q.12ORCID,Watanabe Kohei13,Ichikawa Megumi1,Mallidi Srivalleesha14ORCID,Matsudaira Tatsuyuki1,Timerman Dmitriy1,Swain Joseph W. R.1,Mai Zhiming1,Wakimoto Hiroaki5,Hasan Tayyaba16

Affiliation:

1. Wellman Center for Photomedicine Massachusetts General Hospital and Harvard Medical School Boston Massachusetts USA

2. Department of Physics Northeastern University Boston Massachusetts USA

3. Healthcare Optics Research Laboratory, Canon USA, Inc. Cambridge Massachusetts USA

4. Department of Biomedical Engineering Tufts University Medford Massachusetts USA

5. Brain Tumor Research Center and Molecular Neurosurgery Laboratory, Department of Neurosurgery Massachusetts General Hospital and Harvard Medical School Boston Massachusetts USA

6. Division of Health Sciences and Technology Harvard University and Massachusetts Institute of Technology Cambridge Massachusetts USA

Abstract

AbstractGlioblastoma stem cells (GSCs) are potent tumor initiators resistant to radiochemotherapy, and this subpopulation is hypothesized to re‐populate the tumor milieu due to selection following conventional therapies. Here, we show that 5‐aminolevulinic acid (ALA) treatment—a pro‐fluorophore used for fluorescence‐guided cancer surgery—leads to elevated levels of fluorophore conversion in patient‐derived GSC cultures, and subsequent red light‐activation induces apoptosis in both intrinsically temozolomide chemotherapy‐sensitive and ‐resistant GSC phenotypes. Red light irradiation of ALA‐treated cultures also exhibits the ability to target mesenchymal GSCs (Mes–GSCs) with induced temozolomide resistance. Furthermore, sub‐lethal light doses restore Mes–GSC sensitivity to temozolomide, abrogating GSC‐acquired chemoresistance. These results suggest that ALA is not only useful for fluorescence‐guided glioblastoma tumor resection, but that it also facilitates a GSC drug‐resistance agnostic, red light‐activated modality to mop up the surgical margins and prime subsequent chemotherapy.

Funder

Massachusetts General Hospital

Canon Medical Systems USA

National Cancer Institute

Publisher

Wiley

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