Author:
Wang Jia,Pavliukov Marat S,Yamashita Daisuke,Cheng Peng,Zhang Zhuo,Kim Sung-Hak,Nakano Mayu A,Xie Wanfu,Chen Dongquan,Frett Brendan,Hu Wen-hao,Shin Yong Jae,Lee Yeri,Goidts Violaine,Nam Do-Hyun,Li Hong-yu,Nakano Ichiro
Abstract
AbstractThe highly lethal brain cancer glioblastoma undergoes dynamic changes in molecular profile and cellular phenotype throughout tumor core establishment and in primary-to-recurrent tumor progression. These dynamic changes allow glioblastoma tumors to escape from multimodal therapies, resulting in patient lethality. Here, we identified the emergence of dependence on NEK2-mediated EZH2 signaling, specifically in therapy-resistant tumor core-located glioblastoma cells. In patient-derived glioblastoma core models, NEK2 was required for in vivo tumor initiation, propagation, and radio-resistance. Mechanistically, in glioblastoma core cells, NEK2 binds with EZH2 to prevent its proteasome-mediated degradation in a kinase-dependent manner. Clinically, NEK2 expression is elevated in recurrent tumors after therapeutic failure as opposed to their matched primary untreated cases, and its high expression is indicative of worse prognosis. For therapeutic development, we designed a novel NEK2 kinase inhibitor CMP3a, which effectively attenuated growth of murine glioblastoma models and exhibited a synergistic effect with radiation therapy. Collectively, the emerging NEK2-EZH2 signaling axis is critical in glioblastoma, particularly within the tumor core, and the small molecule inhibitor CMP3a for NEK2 is a potential novel therapeutic agent for glioblastoma.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
Cited by
1 articles.
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