Pericytes augment glioblastoma cell resistance to temozolomide through CCL5-CCR5 paracrine signaling

Xiaoning Zhang(Army Medical University), Kaidi Yang(Army Medical University), Cong Chen(Army Medical University), Zhicheng He(Army Medical University), Qianghu Wang(Nanjing Medical University), Hua Feng(Army Medical University), Shengqing Lv(Army Medical University), Yan Wang(Army Medical University), Min Mao(Army Medical University), Qing Liu(Army Medical University), Yaoyao Tan(Army Medical University), Wenying Wang(Army Medical University), Tianran Li(Army Medical University), Linrong Che(Army Medical University), Zhong‐yi Qin(Army Medical University), Lingxiang Wu(Nanjing Medical University), Min Luo(Army Medical University), Chunhua Luo(Army Medical University), Yuqi Liu(Army Medical University), Wen Yin(Army Medical University), Chao Wang(Army Medical University), Haitao Guo(Army Medical University), Qingrui Li(Army Medical University), Bin Wang(Army Medical University), Wei Chen(Army Medical University), Shuang Wang(Army Medical University), Yu Shi(Army Medical University), Xiu‐Wu Bian(Army Medical University), Yi‐Fang Ping(Army Medical University)
Cell Research
July 8, 2021
Cited by 175Open Access
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Abstract

Glioblastoma (GBM) is a prevalent and highly lethal form of glioma, with rapid tumor progression and frequent recurrence. Excessive outgrowth of pericytes in GBM governs the ecology of the perivascular niche, but their function in mediating chemoresistance has not been fully explored. Herein, we uncovered that pericytes potentiate DNA damage repair (DDR) in GBM cells residing in the perivascular niche, which induces temozolomide (TMZ) chemoresistance. We found that increased pericyte proportion correlates with accelerated tumor recurrence and worse prognosis. Genetic depletion of pericytes in GBM xenografts enhances TMZ-induced cytotoxicity and prolongs survival of tumor-bearing mice. Mechanistically, C-C motif chemokine ligand 5 (CCL5) secreted by pericytes activates C-C motif chemokine receptor 5 (CCR5) on GBM cells to enable DNA-dependent protein kinase catalytic subunit (DNA-PKcs)-mediated DDR upon TMZ treatment. Disrupting CCL5-CCR5 paracrine signaling through the brain-penetrable CCR5 antagonist maraviroc (MVC) potently inhibits pericyte-promoted DDR and effectively improves the chemotherapeutic efficacy of TMZ. GBM patient-derived xenografts with high CCL5 expression benefit from combined treatment with TMZ and MVC. Our study reveals the role of pericytes as an extrinsic stimulator potentiating DDR signaling in GBM cells and suggests that targeting CCL5-CCR5 signaling could be an effective therapeutic strategy to improve chemotherapeutic efficacy against GBM.


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