Ibrutinib inactivates BMX-STAT3 in glioma stem cells to impair malignant growth and radioresistance

Yu Shi(Army Medical University), Olga A. Guryanova(Cleveland Clinic Lerner College of Medicine), Wenchao Zhou(Cleveland Clinic Lerner College of Medicine), Chong Liu(Zhejiang University), Zhi Huang(Cleveland Clinic Lerner College of Medicine), Xiaoguang Fang(Cleveland Clinic Lerner College of Medicine), Xiuxing Wang(University of California San Diego), Cong Chen(Army Medical University), Qiulian Wu(University of California San Diego), Zhicheng He(Army Medical University), Wei Wang(Army Medical University), Wei Zhang(Capital Medical University), Tao Jiang(Capital Medical University), Qing Liu(Army Medical University), Yaping Chen(Army Medical University), Wenying Wang(Army Medical University), Jingjing Wu(Army Medical University), Leo J.Y. Kim(University of California San Diego), Ryan C. Gimple(University of California San Diego), Hua Feng(Army Medical University), Hsiang‐Fu Kung(Army Medical University), Jennifer S. Yu(Cleveland Clinic), Jeremy N. Rich(University of California San Diego), Yi‐Fang Ping(Army Medical University), Xiu‐Wu Bian(Army Medical University), Shideng Bao(Cleveland Clinic Lerner College of Medicine)
Science Translational Medicine
May 30, 2018
Cited by 149

Abstract

Glioblastoma (GBM) is the most lethal primary brain tumor and is highly resistant to current treatments. GBM harbors glioma stem cells (GSCs) that not only initiate and maintain malignant growth but also promote therapeutic resistance including radioresistance. Thus, targeting GSCs is critical for overcoming the resistance to improve GBM treatment. Because the bone marrow and X-linked (BMX) nonreceptor tyrosine kinase is preferentially up-regulated in GSCs relative to nonstem tumor cells and the BMX-mediated activation of the signal transducer and activator of transcription 3 (STAT3) is required for maintaining GSC self-renewal and tumorigenic potential, pharmacological inhibition of BMX may suppress GBM growth and reduce therapeutic resistance. We demonstrate that BMX inhibition by ibrutinib potently disrupts GSCs, suppresses GBM malignant growth, and effectively combines with radiotherapy. Ibrutinib markedly disrupts the BMX-mediated STAT3 activation in GSCs but shows minimal effect on neural progenitor cells (NPCs) lacking BMX expression. Mechanistically, BMX bypasses the suppressor of cytokine signaling 3 (SOCS3)-mediated inhibition of Janus kinase 2 (JAK2), whereas NPCs dampen the JAK2-mediated STAT3 activation via the negative regulation by SOCS3, providing a molecular basis for targeting BMX by ibrutinib to specifically eliminate GSCs while preserving NPCs. Our preclinical data suggest that repurposing ibrutinib for targeting GSCs could effectively control GBM tumor growth both as monotherapy and as adjuvant with conventional therapies.


Related Papers

No related papers found

Powered by citation graph analysis